'I Have Been Given the Power to Teach. The Children Understand Me Very Well.' The Social and Academic Impact of Deaf Teacher Training in Kenya

Resource type
Journal Article
Authors/contributors
Title
'I Have Been Given the Power to Teach. The Children Understand Me Very Well.' The Social and Academic Impact of Deaf Teacher Training in Kenya
Abstract
Kenya has 41 Deaf schools that serve children from Class 1 through secondary school. These schools are all characterised by the fact that they have very few teachers who are fluent in Kenyan sign language. In order to meet the needs of schools and to provide employment opportunities for Deaf Kenyan adults, a small non-governmental organisation identified Deaf secondary school students for training. They received two years of teacher training free of charge. Most have since been awarded teaching contracts by the Kenyan Teacher Service Commission or local school boards. This article reports on results from a preliminary study of the social and academic impacts of this innovation. Results indicate that Deaf teachers are inspirational in the classroom, represent a significant resource for their school communities and are preferred by Deaf students. A follow-up study on the relative learning gains of Deaf students when taught by Deaf teachers is planned once relevant data are available.
Publication
'I Have Been Given the Power to Teach. The Children Understand Me Very Well.' The Social and Academic Impact of Deaf Teacher Training in Kenya
Volume
56
Issue
1
Pages
149-165
Date
2010-02-01
Language
eng
ISSN
0020-8566
Extra
an: EJ878292; source: International Review of Education; docTypes: Journal Articles ; Reports - Evaluative; pubTypes: Academic JournalReport;
Citation
Johnstone, C., & Corce, H. (2010). “I Have Been Given the Power to Teach. The Children Understand Me Very Well.” The Social and Academic Impact of Deaf Teacher Training in Kenya. “I Have Been Given the Power to Teach. The Children Understand Me Very Well.” The Social and Academic Impact of Deaf Teacher Training in Kenya, 56(1), 149–165. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11159-010-9153-0
Publication type