Accessibility Summary

In the article, The Embodied Classroom: Deaf Gain in Multimodal Composition and Digital Studies, the writer gives readers an insight into the challenges and benefits associated with a classroom of deaf and hearing students caused by the access of their learning environment.

They begin by discussing the difference between access to student feedback and actual student feedback. And how in general, this generation of students is more likely to give feedback using technology tools rather than being voluntarily sharing on their own. This is where the struggles become an issue for the combination of all students.

The article gives readers a look into the non-verbal meaning of communication. This is very important in a class with deaf culture and picked up on more than people may realize because students are not able to hear. Accessibility has moved far beyond American Sign Language (ASL) to accommodate the deaf culture in a classroom; technology and human interaction play a more prevalent role to ensure the successful learning of all students in the classroom. Making students feel different is when they turn their back to learning because they may feel that the materials are not reaching them. ASl changes that norm because it is a way of communicating that speaking to and for both the deaf community as well as the hearing community. “Nonverbal communication is the story we tell with our bodies.” (Hunter, 2015). Body language is a huge part of the ASL process; by slightly changing the position or direction of a symbol, the meaning can change as well and this is important because the relationship within a classroom is different. From teacher to student, from student to student, from teacher to parent and parent to student.

When asking students to stage a series of experiments in connection to dissecting their consumer identity. Students were able to come up with course materials including a “mixture of digital, literary, and critical texts, including Rachel Botsman’s TED talk on “Collaborative Consumption” (2010), Lars Eighner’s essay “Dumpster Diving” (1993), Denis Diderot’s “Regrets for My Old Dressing Gown” (1769), Reviewer Rosenbloom’s New York Times essay “But Will It Make You Happy?” (2010), and selections from Lisa Ede’s The Academic Writer (2010).” (Hunter, Washington State University, 2015). His findings were conclusive with how he thought multimodal helped students. With several examples above, students were able to see an example of the learning they wanted to encounter.

Overall, this research was well established and gave readers a more than deep insight into the deaf community learning experience through digital technology.

Hunter, Leeann. “The Embodied Classroom: Deaf Gain in Multimodal Composition and Digital Studies.” The Journal of Interactive Technology and Pedagogy, Washington State University, 17 Dec. 2015, jitp.commons.gc.cuny.edu/the-embodied-classroom-deaf-gain-in-multimodal-composition-and-digital-studies/.

Accessibility Article

The Embodied Classroom: Deaf Gain in Multimodal Composition and Digital Studies

The article I chose discussed how classrooms and schools should could benefit from utilizing embodies discourses and visual-spatial metaphors. Able bodied students today have seemingly perfected the means to communicate with minimal to zero effort in the class room today; shrugged shoulders, crossed arms, a perfect blank stare. But with this there is no means of actual interaction for the student as they’ve “perfected” this false attentiveness. This article is trying to move students in hearing classes from people in the audience to the performers on main stage, in other words getting them actually physically engaged. The article further explains “Deaf Gain”, an approach that deafness shouldn’t be looked at a ‘loss of hearing’ but rather deafness gives you something you gain and can learn from.  It’s also important we use our bodies to the fullest of their ability, as in many deaf classrooms every piece of physical movement is a means of communication and every brow raise, shoulder shrug, hand signal carries meaning and a message. It’s also important to not only have such embodiment in a physical or compositional classroom setting but to have this be manifested in the digital classroom. Overall, we need to get back to our roots and be people again and this is especially necessary in the classrooms where the embodiment of culture can make our differences something we can learn from rather than be something that separates us.