Deaf elementary student yet to be assigned an interpreter for the school year
CBC
Imagine trying to learn in a classroom without sound.
That's the reality for deaf students like Allison Chandler who heavily rely on the support of educational interpreters.
As of Wednesday, she had yet to be assigned one for her Grade 5 year at Rothesay Elementary, according to Allison's mom, Heather Chandler.
Heather said if arrangements aren't made before classes start on Sept. 6, she will be keeping her daughter at home.
"Why would we send her there to be isolated completely from everybody around her and then have it in her face constantly that she is not valuable enough to be able to access what's going on in the classroom," she said. "I do not support that whatsoever, so she will not be going to school."
Educational interpreters use spoken and sign language to communicate information between hearing people, including teachers, and students who are deaf.
These services are organized through the Atlantic Provinces Special Education Authority, or APSEA, It's an interprovincial co-operative agency that provides educational support for children and youth who are deaf, hard of hearing, blind or visually impaired in Atlantic Canada.
No one with the agency was available for an interview.
In a statement, New Brunswick Department of Education spokesperson Morgan Bell said it's important that every child has equal opportunity, but educational interpreters are hard to come by.
"There are currently three educational interpreter positions in the province. Due to a nationwide shortage of trained American Sign Language (ASL) interpreters, one of the three positions is unfilled," the statement said.
Chandler said Allison, who communicates in American Sign Language, was paired with both an educational interpreter and a deaf professional in kindergarten and Grade 1.
Unlike the interpreter, the deaf professional is a member of the deaf community and uses ASL as their first language. Heather said this person was able to fill in the blanks for Allison during the school day as she learned the language.
"It was wildly successful," Chandler said. "Her language took off. I was, like, left in the dust trying to keep up with her, and then they told me that they didn't want to do that anymore, and they felt that she had good enough language."
In Grades 2, 3, and 4, Allison had an educational interpreter, but Heather said without the deaf professional she wasn't fully accessing the classroom.
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