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No Sign of Education

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 February 2017

John V. Van Cleve*
Affiliation:
Gallaudet College

Abstract

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Type
Essay Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © 1986 by History of Education Society 

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References

Notes

1. Moores, Donald F., Educating the Deaf: Psychology, Principles, and Practices, 2d ed. (Boston, 1982), 297.Google Scholar

2. Financial Statement — Public Residential Schools in the United States, October 1, 1982,” American Annals of the Deaf 128 (April 1983):217226.Google Scholar

3. Tabular Summary of Schools and Classes in the United States, October 1, 1983,” American Annals of the Deaf 129 (April 1984):188189.Google Scholar

4. Lane, Harlan, The Wild Boy of Aveyron (Cambridge, Mass., 1976); Lane, Harlan, When the Mind Hears (New York, 1984), 387.Google Scholar

5. See Moores, , Educating the Deaf; Gannon, Jack R., Deaf Heritage: A Narrative History of Deaf America, ed. Butler, Jane and Gilbert, Laura-Jean (Silver Spring, Md., 1981); Lane, Harlan and Grosjean, Francois, eds. Recent Perspectives on American Sign Language (Hillsdale, N.J., 1980); Flint, Richard W., “History of the Education of the Hearing Impaired,” in Hearing and Hearing Impairment , ed. Bradford, Larry J. and Hardy, William G. (New York, 1979), 19–37; Scouten, Edward L., Turning Points in the Education of Deaf People (Danville, Ill. 1984).Google Scholar

6. See Bellugi, Ursula and Klima, Edward S., Signs of Language (Cambridge, 1979); Stokoe, William C. Jr., Casterline, Dorothy C., and Croneberg, Carl G., eds., A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles (Washington, D.C., 1965); Schein, Jerome D., The Deaf Community: Studies in the Social Psychology of Deafness (Washington, D.C., 1968); Meadows, Kathryn P., “The Deaf Subculture,” Hearing and Speech Action 43 (July-August 1975): 16–18; Charrow, Veda R. and Wilbur, Ronnie B., “The Deaf Child as a Linguistic Minority,” Theory into Practice 14 (December 1975): 357–8; Higgins, Paul C., Outsiders in a Hearing World: A Sociology of Deafness (Beverly Hills, Calif, 1980); Nash, Jeffrey E. and Nash, Anedith, Deafness in Society (Lexington, Mass., 1981); Baker, Charlotte and Battison, Robbin, eds., Sign Language and the Deaf Community: Essays in Honor of William Stokoe (Silver Spring, Md, 1980); Lane, and Grosjean, , Recent Perspectives .Google Scholar

7. Two examples already in print are Schuchman, John S., “Silent Movies and the Deaf Community,” Journal of Popular Culture 17 (Spring 1984): 5878; and Van Cleve, John V., “Nebraska's Oral Law of 1911 and the Deaf Community,” Nebraska History 65 (Summer 1984):195–220. Others will appear in Gallaudet Encyclopedia of Deaf People and Deafness ed. Van Cleve, John V. (forthcoming).Google Scholar

8. Lane, , Deaf Experience, 1.Google Scholar

9. Ibid., 26.Google Scholar

10. Ibid., 35.Google Scholar

11. Ibid., 148.Google Scholar

12. Ibid., 127.Google Scholar

13. Lane, , When the Mind Hears, 340.Google Scholar

14. Rothman, David J., The Discovery of the Asylum: Social Order and Disorder in the New Republic (Boston, 1971).Google Scholar

15. Lane, , When the Mind Hears, 387.Google Scholar

16. Information compiled by the reviewer from Columbia Institution for the Deaf and Dumb and Blind: Statistics of Pupils. Gallaudet College Archives, Gallaudet College, Washington, DC.Google Scholar

17. Gannon, , Deaf Heritage, 422.Google Scholar

18. No study specifically about these individuals has been published. However, the Volta Review, a journal published by the Alexander Graham Bell Association, occasionally carries articles by or about orally educated deaf individuals.Google Scholar