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<text id=94TT1355>
<title>
Oct. 03, 1994: Education:Beyond the Sound Barrier
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
Oct. 03, 1994 Blinksmanship
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
EDUCATION, Page 66
Beyond the Sound Barrier
</hdr>
<body>
<p> Deaf Americans are proud that one of their own is Miss America.
But can her example apply to them?
</p>
<p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Ann Blackman/Washington, Hannah Bloch/New York and
David Rynecki/Birmingham
</p>
<p> The green-eyed brunette had scored high in the swimsuit competition.
She had received repeated ovations during her talent program,
a ballet set to the religious pop anthem Via Dolorosa. But it
was during the beauty contest's final, brief Q& A that Miss Alabama,
21, performed her most moving feat. She answered a question.
Her voice was a bit fluty and her consonants soft, but the college
junior clearly understood Regis Philbin's query about self-realization;
and her reply, a paean to belief in oneself, was obviously deeply
felt. Minutes later, when Heather Whitestone, who is deaf in
one ear and has only 5% hearing in the other, won the 74th annual
Miss America Pageant, she didn't realize it until her runner-up
pointed to her. Then she burst into happy tears--joined, undoubtedly,
by thousands of viewers around the country.
</p>
<p> If there was ever a Miss America worth cheering--or crying--for, she would appear to be the one. But deaf viewers, although
thrilled for one of their own, noticed that beyond the well-known
gesture for "I love you," Whitestone made no use of American
Sign Language, the primary idiom of over half the country's
profoundly deaf citizens, whose number may reach 2 million.
In fact, comments by the new queen on ASL and deaf pedagogy
may make her controversial, in a community where linguistics
and education are issues more fraught than those of religion,
money or sex. Should the deaf emulate her triumphant plunge
into the mainstream? Can they?
</p>
<p> The story of the deaf in America is intimately bound up with
ASL and its travails. Traditionally, schooling for the deaf
featured attempts, usually unsuccessful, to get them to learn
and speak languages they couldn't hear. In the early 1800s,
however, American instructors, acknowledging deaf practice,
began teaching a language composed entirely of gestures. ASL
became the backbone of almost all formal schooling for the deaf.
In 1880, however, educators reverted to a philosophy called
oralism. Unlike ASL, oralism was committed to English: written,
lip-read and spoken.
</p>
<p> Oralism was only sporadically successful, and schools that subscribed
to it or to related techniques found that students still learned
ASL on the sly. "Try as they might, they were unable to stamp
out sign language," says Northeastern University linguist Harlan
Lane, author of The Mask of Benevolence: Disabling the Deaf
Community. Yet "signing" would wait another century for its
renaissance: in the 1960s, when linguists certified it as just
as autonomous, flexible and rich as English, it became the core
of an identity movement that still flourishes today. More than
half a million ASL speakers--a group sometimes plagued by
passivity and disengagement--reconceived themselves as members
of a vibrant linguistic minority. Their most visible political
statement was the 1988 protest by students at Washington's Gallaudet
University that pressured the institution into hiring a deaf
president. Culturally, activists began distinguishing between
"deaf" (to describe the disability) and "Deaf" (to represent
the language group).
</p>
<p> Heather Whitestone would seem the living contradiction of that
entire ethos. After a bacterial infection rendered her deaf
at age 18 months, her mother, Daphne Gray, decided against ASL
training. "I think it's important for every child to be part
of the mainstream world's society," she now says. Instead, she
started Heather on an oral regimen that entailed refining her
residual hearing by standing behind her, speaking words. It
was difficult. Says Heather: "It took me six years to say my
last name correctly." But it worked. After attending Alabama
public schools and then St. Louis' Central Institute for the
Deaf, which emphasizes lipreading and spoken English, she went
on to study at a Birmingham arts academy and graduate from a
public high school with a 3.6 grade point average--without
the use of an ASL interpreter.
</p>
<p> In fact Whitestone has gone on record saying that she finds
ASL constraining. While participating in a Miss Deaf Alabama
contest, she has said, she realized that "sign language puts
more limits to their dreams." She adds, "As long as they don't
use English, it's not going to help them be successful." She
prefers Signed Exact English (SEE), which translates English
word-for-word into gestures instead of using the unique, more
streamlined vocabulary and grammar of ASL.
</p>
<p> Most deaf Americans were ecstatic at her victory. Signs Jack
Gannon, a special assistant to the president of Gallaudet, "She's
a new heroine for us. A star. Someone to look up to." Alok Doshi,
a student at the Rochester Institute of Technology's National
Technical Institute for the Deaf, was at a party when the lights
in the house were flashed for attention, and someone signed
the good news about Whitestone: "We all signed to each other
and cheered."
</p>
<p> Yet when apprised of Whitestone's remark about ASL being limiting,
Doshi says (via computer E-mail), "I truly disagree with that."
MJ Bienvenu, head of the Bicultural Center in Riverdale, Maryland,
goes further. Speaking through an interpreter, she says, "That's
a very damaging statement; there are many successful Deaf people."
Bienvenu, a leading ideologue of cultural deafness, isn't happy
Whitestone won. "It misportrays what Deaf is," she says. "She
may be ((medically)) deaf, but she does not have the social
identity of a Deaf person."
</p>
<p> Perhaps more important, Whitestone may possess more luck than
many deaf people can hope for. Lipreading involves inborn talent,
and its most competent practitioners regard it as fatiguing
and inexact. Whitestone has heroically exploited her residual
hearing and her early exposure to spoken language, assets unavailable
to those profoundly deaf from birth. Although SEE was invented
to teach English, it may be more useful to someone who already
knows it. Thus while her example should inspire the partially
deaf or hard of hearing, it may be less applicable to the majority
of profoundly deaf Americans.
</p>
<p> Only a minority of institutions practice pure oralism anymore;
but a babel of challenges to ASL remain. Mainstreaming, the
widespread and generally salutary policy of removing students
with disabilities from special schools and seeding them through
regular classes, may be counterproductive for the deaf. They
cannot be expected simply to "pick up" English from their new
classmates; and yet removing them from an all-deaf environment
may prevent them from picking up ASL. Northeastern's Lane talks
grimly of their "drowning in the mainstream." Total communication,
which asked teachers to sign ASL and speak English simultaneously,
although once popular, seems in decline. Cued speech, essentially
lipreading enhanced with explanatory gestures, has a small group
of enthusiastic backers. Even Bienvenu champions "bilingual-bicultural"
education (Bi-Bi), which uses signing as a foundation toward
"English as a second language."
</p>
<p> In Manhattan's Plaza Hotel, between TV appearances and clothes-shopping
expeditions, Whitestone receives a guest. Dressed in a T shirt
and a polka-dot vest and pants, she is an enthusiastic and fluent
conversation partner. She readily acknowledges not being part
of Deaf culture--"I don't know it very well. I have seen it"--and tends to refer even to small d deaf as "them."
</p>
<p> Indeed, linguistic politics interest her far less than her own,
very mainstream motivational program, called STARS because it
has five points ("positive attitude," "a dream," "hard work,"
"knowing your problems but not letting them master you" and
"a support team"). The system has already been introduced in
a Birmingham-area school. In fact, the acounting major is currently
considering a career change: "Maybe I'll be a math teacher or
a counselor, so that I could see young people every day."
</p>
<p> Does she want to apply her philosophy to deaf young people or
hearing young people? It is Whitestone's strength, but also,
perhaps, her weakness, that she feels the same approach should
apply equally well to both.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>