mothwing: An image of a man writing on a typewriter in front of a giant clockface. At the bottom is the VFD symbol and the inscription "the world is quiet here" (Pen)
DGS is a lot of fun, not only because it's intuitive, but also because it's so quiet in that classroom. Of course we talk orally during the break, but it's signing all through class. Crocky and I did our third course today. They're intensive weekend courses, and right now we're on our way to level A2. Or at least that's what the themes we're covering would have me believe.

Sitting in language classes always reminds me of the fact that I'm a better language learner than language teacher (and god, I'm such a perfectionist little suck-up), but also how lost you can feel in a classroom in which people speak in a language in which you cannot communicate, or how much fun it is to try and make up sentences with the few words you know.

As always in this sort of course (at the VHS), there were a variety of other people of various ages and backgrounds. Many seem to be educators of various walks of life who want to work with hearing impaired or deaf children in future, but some were just there because they're interested. Others, like the other gay person in the course, have hearing impaired loved ones and relatives. People also sign at very different speeds. One person has a visual impairment which makes him slow, another person (whom I was partnered with this weekend) is fluent in ASL and is in the course to learn DGS. I was not able to keep up with him at all, but I like to believe that I didn't make too much of a fool of myself.

What is most difficult is remembering a language, correct syntax and vocabulary especially, without any form of meaningful notation system I can use. Due to my Alma Mater I'm vaguely familiar with the phonetic transcription system HamNoSys because I once attended a course on comparative phonology, but can't write it. Right now I'm using my own garbled version of the Stokoe notation and I doubt that I'll ever get behind SignWriting. I'll have to practice a lot before we're on to the fourth course in December, and it'll be long before I attempt to speak to anyone in this language. Other than Crocky.

People.

Wednesday, January 26th, 2011 03:50 pm
mothwing: "I can't be having with this" next to the grim looking face of Granny Weatherwax (Granny)
People.

I know that you're all super busy with all your lesson plans and stuff, and I know that most of you sit through their didactics seminars pretty much on autopilot, but I'd like to point out something.

"The boys should focus on Romeo and the girls on Juliet, because all girls can identify with lusting after the forbidden guy."

Think about this for more than five seconds and you'll see that this is a dumb task with a dumber explanation for its existence. It's factually wrong. This is not PC-ness gone wild, this is a factual error that you're making. I think we all agree about the fact that you shouldn't teach kids wrong things. So get a clue, teacher. Especially given the fact that you feel comfortable saying this to me shows such incredible levels of idiocy I don't even know where to start.

I know that you'll say that you can't pay attention to these things all of the time, because the vast majority of people are straight and ID as either of the two, but seriously, do you also not pay attention to misspelt words if students only get one letter wrong because the vast majority of letters in the word are fine?

I know that there is a reason why I'm made so damn uncomfortable by the fact that everybody loves Romeo and Juliet and other straight institutions so damn much, but really, people, there's a fucking limit. 

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