My Neighborhood Cultural Experience Carol Salinas Kaplan University HU300-09 Abstract I have had a great opportunity to look at some of my town’s most incredible architecture‚ paintings‚ murals‚ and sculptures. Our family has lived here for over six years now and I have had the pleasure to visiting our three local Native American Museums. I have always enjoyed going to them on occasion when I feel like just getting out by myself and having some quite time. My experiences in this class have
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An Analysis of my cultural experience Arriving at a foreign country at the age of eleven years old was and exiting and yet intimidating experience. High buildings‚ wide roads‚ newer and nicer cars on the streets were some of the first things I noticed when I arrived to the city of Los Angeles CA. Living in a country where you were not born in could be difficult some times. Although Spanish is spoken at a grand scale in CA‚ it was difficult to communicate with and understand the teachers from my
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The De’VIA and Experiences of Their Eyes Art involving Deaf Visual and Image Art is known as De’VIA. De’VIA was an art movement inspired by deaf artists to “come out of the closet” during the early 1980s and late 1990s (Miller 303). To come out of the closet is to show pride in being deaf‚ instead of hiding their deafness or trying to imitate the hearing. Deaf people have a history comprise of discrimination‚ being ignored and oppressed by the hearing world. Thus‚ through their art they are able
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The Cultures and Subcultures of the Deaf and Deaf-Blind. California University of Pennsylvania CMD 350: Sign Language & Braille I September 27‚ 2011 The Cultures and Subcultures of the Deaf and Deaf-Blind. Deaf culture describes the social beliefs‚ behaviors‚ art‚ literary traditions‚ history‚ values and shared institutions of communities that are affected by deafness and which use sign languages as the main means of communication (http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deaf_culture). Much
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Running Head: CULTURAL IMMERSION EXPERIENCE Cultural Immersion Experience Social/Cultural Foundations of Counseling The experience that I had at the Jewish Museum was unlike anything I had anticipated. Right from the beginning‚ I was immersed in a culture that was so unfamiliar to me but so rich in history. I learned an array of different things from careers of early Jewish immigrants to the struggles they faced during World War II. As I went through the museum
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hearing are classified as deaf. There are many deaf people in the world‚ it can range from 5 million to 40 million people. The population of people who are deaf is so large‚ they even have their own Deaf culture or community. The Deaf culture is best defined as a social group of people who consider deafness to be a difference in human experience. Most people believe it’s a disability‚ but it’s not. It is assumed that if you are deaf you are automatically included into the Deaf community‚ or if you are
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innovations that have enabled the Deaf or hard of hearing to be able to hear. Specifically‚ cochlear implants is the leading option that provides people who are entirely Deaf with the ability to hear. However‚ not everyone who is deaf wants the ability to hear. Most people who are associated with the Deaf community and culture are adamantly against cochlear implants. The reason is that some are afraid of the prospect that this implantation will eradicate the Deaf culture. Deaf people are proud of their culture
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Cultural Immersion Experience I participated in the disabled culture for my out-of-class experience. I attended a Birthday Party and visited with a mentally challenged client (son of my friend) with a family friend at Parkwood Developmental nursing home facility in Valdosta‚ GA. Parkwood Nursing home is the residence of approximately 50 clients with varying mental and physical abilities. The front door of the building looks like the door on a house. When entering the front door
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In the Deaf world‚ the people who are Deaf‚ deaf‚ hard-of-hearing‚ and orals have many defined of each term to identify what they are. They once thought that they are part of the Deaf Culture in which they would think that where they belong. But‚ according to James Woodward (1972)‚ uses the lowercase deaf when it referring to the audiological condition of not hearing‚ and the uppercase Deaf when referring to a particular group of deaf people who share a language of American Sign Language and a culture
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interesting. I personally have a deaf niece she has a cochlear implant. She was lucky enough to have it done early in life around two years of age‚ and she is doing very well. It’s very enlightening to hear how the deaf community in these videos view the cochlear. Me being a hearing person I would see the cochlear as a blessing like Peter’s brother and wife‚ but to Heather’s parents it was seen a threat. I can understand why. Naturally change is unwanted by many people.The deaf culture is all they know they
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