Category: Schools

Teenager Gets USC Degree

Faith Wallace graduates from USC today--at the age of 19. Her family discovered she was deaf at the age of two. Her family can't afford anything more than a single analog hearing aid. That didn't stop her from graduating from Covina High School in Convina, California at the age of 15. Now she's coming out of college with a bachelor's degree in psychology and a minor in law. She hopes to attend UC Berkeley's graduate school for her Ph.D in psychology and eventually work with mentally ill prisoners.

Investigations and Board changes at state school

While a state investigation is underway into the use of funds at the Arizona State Schools for the Deaf and Blind, along with a conflict of interest investigation, the governor appointed five new people to the board of directors today. Governor Jan Brewer allowed three of the previous members to remain on the board, so that in all, there are eight people serving on the board. The new members include:

Former dean of the Laurent Clerk National Deaf Education Center at Gallaudet University, Kathy Jankowski.

Pima Community College faculty member Taralynn Petrites--who leads the ASL and Interpreter Training program at the school.

Foundation for Blind Children former director of children’s service, Elaine Baldridge.

Southern Arizona Association for the Visually Impaired executive director Michael Gordon.

Arizona Ear Center otologist Mark Syms.

Prom night

Michigan School for the Deaf students explain how they planned their prom dance here.

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Rochester School sets Record

A record number of students graduated from the NTID this year. The National Technical Institute for the Deaf gave out diplomas this weekend: 121 associate degrees, 27 master’s degrees in secondary education, 54 bachelor degrees in interpreting, and 212 bachelor or higher degrees in other colleges of RIT. Stephen Aldersley, NTID’s vice president for Academic Affairs, told students to "become a success and to receive an award, you must be smart, determined, creative, motivated and hungry. And you need to do these things every day, all throughout the quarter. I’m confident you will carry these characteristics with you throughout the world after you graduate.” The National Technical Institute for the Deaf is part of New York's Rochester Institute of Technology. You'll find a list of awards given to graduating students here.

NFL players at Deaf School

Green Bay Packers players stop at Wisconsin School for the Deaf as part of the team's eighth annual Tailgate Tour. Find out what they told students here.

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Visitors from the Philippines

Deaf leaders from the Philippines visited the Rochester School for the Deaf Monday. WHEC-TV has a video report below (captions included).

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Hurwitz honored

Dr. T. Alan Hurwitz picked up a Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree at Fresno State University Friday. The president of Gallaudet University. Because he couldn't attend the school's commencement, a special ceremony was held to bestow the honor on him at the College of Health and Human Services Honors Convocation. Fresno State President John Welty praised Hurwitz as a well-known role model in the deaf and hard-of-hearing community.

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Goalkeeper Heading In Right Direction

Find out what a deaf goalkeeper studying at the University of Bedfordshire in the UK plans to do when she finishes her degree. Read the story here.

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Medical Student gets Court Date

In January, DNT reported on a deaf medical school student court victory. An appeals court reinstated Michael Argenyi's lawsuit against Creighton University after it was dismissed by a judge. He sued the Omaha school for discrimination because the private Jesuit university accepted him for medical school but then refused to accommodate his learning needs. We now know his case will go in front of an Omaha jury starting the week of August 20. Argenyi has a cochlear implant but also uses cued speech. He was able to use a transcription service along with a cued speech interpreter at Seattle University as an undergrad. He earned a high GPA at the school in Washington State. While at Creighton, he was provided some assistance, but Argenyi says it was not enough. The school refused his request for interpreters and a transcription system - claiming the services were to expensive. Creighton even refused to let him use an interpreter when he interacted with patients--despite the fact that he was willing to pay for the service out of his own pocket. The school told him that he should not be using interpreters in the "real world."

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Deaf Student Graduates from Miss State

Ramon Alford will be the third deaf student to graduate from Mississippi State University at Meridian during ceremonies this coming Saturday. Find out what it took for Alford to earn his degree in psychology here.
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