Art in Deaf Education
Art in Deaf Education
Art in Deaf Education
com
May, 2013
Vol 2 Issue 5
Abstract:
Students who are deaf typically lack the language of the hearing, even in written form.
This hearing handicap presents serious academic challenges that require visual teaching
strategies. Nonetheless, it is not clear whether visual teaching is practised in the various
Schools for the Deaf hence the need to investigate its practice in the Schools for the Deaf
in Ghana. A multiple site case study approach was adopted to investigate teaching and
learning in five Schools for the Deaf in Ghana. The purposive sampling technique and a
three-tier research strategy involving observation, in-depth interview and focus group
discussion were used to get the accessible population and to gather data for the study
respectively. The findings from this qualitative study revealed that although the deaf is a
visual learner, visual teaching in Schools for the Deaf is not adequately practised in a
way that meets the visual needs of the deaf. Therefore the need to adopt and modify new
trends to meet the needs of deaf students.
Keywords: Visual teaching, Art, Projected and Non-projected Visual Art Forms.
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1.Introduction
Although much literature exists on the benefits of illustrations and other visual formats to
support teaching and learning, little is known about how such visual art forms can
support the education of the deaf. Deaf people are by nature, visual learners
(Easterbrooks & Stoner, 2006) and should be taught visually and aesthetically. The
absence of auditory feedback which is necessary for speech acquisition during the early
developmental stages is most handicapping in students who are deaf and therefore
require visual teaching. Whereas hearing children regulate their own speech and
recognize the speech of others largely through hearing, the deaf depend mainly on vision
to perceive the speech of others. Due to this hearing impairment and visual aspect of the
deaf, they are regarded as visual learners. This explains that, everything taught to them
should be visual enough to compensate for their hearing lose. The use of visual art forms
in teaching to the deaf therefore plays a pivotal position in the success of deaf education,
so research is needed to ascertain whether or not teaching done in the Schools for the
deaf include enough visual art forms.
Long before words were understood by any human, the art of gestures and movements
had already been understood underscoring their importance in communication (Smith,
1995). Children gesticulate, make movements, leap, draw and paint long before they
form proper speech communication skills. Art is a visual language with receptive and
expressive components in which ideas are communicated without having to make a
speech (Eubanks, 2011). This suggests that art can become a teaching tool in the
education of people with verbal communication disabilities. Art can also move from the
fringes of the curriculum toward the core of learning for all young children, especially
those for whom spoken language acquisition is difficult.
Art is a method of expression and a form of language through which students can
become more sensitive to their own ideas and feelings and communicate these with peers
and adults. Because art is an important form of communication, it may have especially
important implications for students who have language handicaps. Art is particularly
relevant in the education of the deaf because it provides them with a means to focus on
what the eyes can see rather than what they can hear. To the deaf, art can be a hobby, a
learning aid as well as a mode of communication.
Even in peer relationships, art activities provide many opportunities for students to work
together and to share their expertise. When handicapped students have special talents in
art and are given peer recognition, their cognitive, social and emotional developments
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are enhanced (Schulz and Turnbull, 1984). In much the same way art can provide unique
ways for deaf students to acquire skills and knowledge that could otherwise be
impossible to gain, giving them the confidence to be creative while engaging in art
activities. The teaching of reading has traditionally also incorporated art such as pictures
and illustrations that facilitate the understanding of the text. In a classroom scenario,
students can describe their experiences for the teacher to write these down in words
which the students then illustrate through art projects and thereby learn to recognize and
comprehend the words in written form.
Another idea is that children's drawings offer a cognitive pathway into their
understanding, allowing their teachers to check the students understanding of new
vocabulary and correct syntax (Eubanks, 2011). Eubanks believes that drawing and other
visual means of thinking can foster the development of written language because it
provides an opportunity to rehearse, develop, and organize ideas prior to writing. This
suggests that students who are deaf could learn to rely on visual clues for information
and understanding.
In comparing art as a visual language to a verbal language, Eubanks (2011) identifies
that verbal language consists of receptive and expressive components. Whereas receptive
language refers to the understanding of words used by others and the decoding of verbal
symbols, expressive language refers to communicating ideas by speaking or writing, in
effect, the creation of coded verbal symbols. In visual language, Eubanks explains that
viewers read and interpret the visual symbols encoded in works of art and express visual
language through the creation of visual symbol systems which enables them to make
marks or objects that communicate ideas. This means that form in verbal language
constitutes sounds, words, and the way the words are arranged. The equivalent of this in
the visual language, Eubanks states, is the physical evidence of the artist's expression in
terms of the elements of art and principles of design. The implication is that content in
language can be considered equivalent to meaning in the visual art forms as meaning is
often embedded in the symbols artists use and arrange with the conscious intent of
creating meaning.
Visual language is more holistic than spoken language and more efficient as a
disseminator of knowledge than most other means of communication (Eubanks, 2011).
In much the same way, Arnheim (1969) as cited in Eubanks (2011) considers visual
language superior because it comes closer to the original stimulus as verbal language is
linear, sequential, and one dimensional, by comparison. It is perhaps these factors that
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make Art educators describe art as the first language of children. We learn to read visual
language, without formal instruction earlier and more spontaneously than verbal
language. Consequently, children with modest verbal reading ability are able to read
complex visual images. Citing Owens (1988), Eubanks agrees that children can
understand words before they can say them. Similarly with visual language, young
children learn to recognize and identify visual images by age one-and-a half or two
years, though they generally do not begin to make meaningful marks before age 3 or 4
years.
All the similarities described as existing between art and language point toward the
perspective that art is a language, a system of symbols used for communication. The
relationship between art, the visual language, and verbal language development is a
strong one. Young children's visual expressions can be an important part of their
developing symbolic repertoire (Eubanks, 2011) and therefore in the teaching and
learning process teachers and learners need to employ more visual language. Deaf
students need visual expression to communicate and should be taught through visual
language because their inability to perceive sounds and speech auditorily establishes the
need for them to rely on what is seen and not what is heard. This implies that the deaf is
a visual learner and therefore quality education for them should be based on teaching
through the use of visual art forms.
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utilization of the arts as a teaching tool per se (Senate Report pp. 94-169 cited in Smith,
1995).
Invariably, the use of visual art forms helps strengthen memory in deaf students who
have to rely so much on visual communication to be informed. Smith (1995) believes the
art helps cognitive development and explains that all the arts offer opportunities for the
child to talk about what he/she is doing or expects to do, and all the arts work on helping
a child to visualize. To visualize helps a child to remember, which helps in academic
development. Even straight academic content such as mathematics, grammar, syntax and
spelling can be taught effectively to learning-disabled children through the arts (Smith,
1995).
Goodlad and Morrison (1980) as cited in Schulz and Turnbull (1984)
claim that
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3.Methodology
The study employed the qualitative research with multiple-site case study approach to
investigate the teaching and learning activities in five Schools for the Deaf located in
four regions of Ghana. Data was collected through observation, in-depth interview and
focus group discussion which was made possible because the lead researcher was literate
in the Ghanaian Sign language and therefore understood the teaching and learning
procedure in the various classrooms of the deaf.
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3.1.Population
Five Schools for the Deaf are located in the Greater Accra, Western, Ashanti and Eastern
Regions of Ghana were sampled for the study. The sample studied was a homogenous
group of 50 legally deaf students, five headteachers and 45 teachers. Additional data
were obtained through observation in 48 different classrooms and interview of two deaf
education specialists; a lecturer at the Department of Special Education, University of
Education Winneba and a former president of the Ghana National Association of the
Deaf (GNAD). This made a sample size of 104 respondents.
3.2.Procedure
The observation was carried out in 48 out of 64 classrooms, making 75%. The
classrooms were confidently observed for 8 weeks. Series of observations were carried
out with teachers and students of the selected schools. These exercises also took place
during practical lessons in order to observe the use of visual art forms in the sampled
Schools for the Deaf.
Unstructured interviews were conducted with five head teachers, 30 teachers and 50
students of the selected schools, two specialists in deaf education and two stakeholders
of education. Several trips were made to the selected Schools of the Deaf and individuals
to conduct the interviews. In each interview, the respondents were briefed on the essence
of the research to get their interest and cooperation.
The focus group discussion was conducted in four of the five selected Schools for the
Deaf. In all, 15 teachers participated in the various discussions. The discussions took
place in the staff common rooms where the teachers were relaxing after classes.
The activities of the various classrooms were recorded using observation checklist. The
recording device included laptop computer and a digital camera. Shots were also taken of
some places and teaching aids available in the selected schools.
4.Findings
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language which enabled the teachers to interact with their students through question and
answer sessions in which a number of the students got involved. This method of teaching
was particularly seen during Social Studies lessons. The teachers explained the content
of the lesson to their deaf students virtually repeating most of the sentences in much the
same way over and over again till the preferred understanding was attained.
Even though the activity and the project methods were used by some teachers in the
Visual arts and Vocational skills departments, the situation was different at other
departments such as the Social Studies and the English departments. In most English
Language lessons observed, the teachers instructed deaf students to read verbatim from
their English Language textbooks via Sign Language. Some of the deaf students were
able to read intelligently via Sign Language but made little meaning out of the text. 58%
of Junior High School 2 and 3 students as well as Senior High School students of the
selected schools could read fluently word for word but their interpretations of the read
text were misleading. Clarifications from the teachers revealed that Sign Language has
its own rules and structure which are different from the rules and structure of English
Language therefore, using it to teach or learn other language strictly without other
interventions such as the use of visual art forms posed problems.
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Figure 1: Examples of non-projected visual art forms used in the Schools for the Deaf
Source: Field Photograph
At the preschool levels the teachers used non-projected visual art forms such as wall
charts and flashcards as a support to teaching Sign Language to beginners; to enforce
Sign Language and to teach rudimentary elements of the environment such as trees and
houses to the deaf as Figure 2 depicts. The pupils in the kindergarten were able to touch
and to create things with their own hands through visual learning. The on-hand
experiences helped the deaf pupils to create memories that they could later refer. Using
physical objects such as fruits, fish, trees, and tables, the deaf pupils were able to feel
and come to terms with things of their immediate environment.
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Illustrations and pictures used to teach basic knowledge of living things to deaf pupils
supported the use of visual art forms in teaching. For instance, in the School for the Deaf
in the Greater Accra Region, the Kindergarten One teachers used colourful illustrations
and pictures to teach deaf pupils subject on the extended family system and family
responsibilities. At that early stage of knowledge acquisition, everything taught in the
lesson focused on the pictures and illustrations of wall charts and some diagrams that the
teachers put up on the blackboards which helped the pupils to understand the lessons
quickly.
However, the use of visual art forms in teaching to the deaf at the upper classes of the
Primary, the Junior High and the Senior High School levels diminished as deaf students
attained lessons from these upper classes. The teachers of these upper classes did not
incorporate enough visual art forms in teaching. They stuck to the explanation and
discussion method of teaching with little or no visual aid. Still the traditional chalk and
talk method of teaching was observed in practice with little use of visual art forms
flushing through in some lessons. The teachers generally talked at length during lesson
periods and explained what are expected of the students via Sign Language with very
little visual demonstration except for their facial and body gestures which the Sign
Language requires for better communication. The teachers found it hard to appreciate the
amount of knowledge that would be gained from the use of visual art forms in teaching
to the deaf. They were of the notion that visual teaching is not a policy that requires strict
enforcement. Although they acknowledged the importance of the use of visual art forms
in teaching to the deaf, they took for granted the positive effect it would have on
classroom teaching and learning.
The use of projected visual art forms such as computer and TV in the form of digital
visual displays, power point presentations and the use of cartoons and animations
attracted very little attention in the Schools for the Deaf both at the preschool and the
High school levels. In most cases, the teachers had little knowledge of such projected
visual tool as direct teaching materials. Most of such visual items existed in the sampled
Schools for the Deaf but were not used as visual teaching tools. For instance, the teachers
were of the view that the use of power point presentation may sway the attention of deaf
students especially those at the very basic level such that its purpose in teaching may not
be realized. This situation also gave reason to why most computer laboratories at the
Schools for the Deaf had inadequate facilities such as computers and computer
accessories.
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4.3.Reasons For The Short Of Visual Teaching In Schools For The Deaf
All the teachers of the selected Schools for the Deaf were aware of the visual teaching
needs of the deaf and the learning difficulties their students grapple with given the
current teaching and learning challenges of deaf education in Ghana. The teachers
believed that hearing impairment requires different communication modality skills and
teaching strategies that meet the hearing handicap of deaf students. The teachers
description of visual teaching tallies with Gardner's (1993) claim that visual learners
process information most effectively when the information is seen.
As Oppong (2003) also argues, the interest and participation of the deaf in the teaching
and learning process are sustained if the teaching-learning materials are visual enough.
However, 57% (17 out of the 30) of the participant teachers were of the notion that
grown-up deaf students do not need a lot of visuals. They explained that as deaf students
mature, the value of visual teaching diminishes implying that visual teaching is
appropriate only for school children at the lower levels. This belief of teachers
contradicts the claim of Easterbrooks and Stoner (2006) that visuals are important to all
deaf students in all different age groups. The fact is that the teaching syllabi of the
Schools for the Deaf in Ghana do not show sufficient guidance on what teachers are
expected to do to incorporate visuals in teaching and so even though some teachers
might want to use visuals they lack the guidance needed for a successful incorporation.
The teachers outlined a number of challenges encountered with the practice of visual
teaching in the selected Schools for the Deaf. Visual art forms in the various Schools for
the Deaf were inadequate. The teachers complained that the government of Ghana does
not provide enough teaching-learning materials that meet their specific needs to the
schools. The observation however, was that all the studied Schools for the Deaf had
some teaching-learning materials such as posters and wall charts that the teachers did not
make good use of. Such teaching-learning materials were left to gather dust in the offices
of the headteachers.
The teachers argued that the use of visual art forms in teaching consumes a lot of time
adding that the learning difficulties of the deaf already requires attention and demands a
lot of explanation therefore, incorporating visual art forms would be time consuming and
overly stressful for one teacher to handle. The teachers further expounded that as
teachers of the deaf, they already lag behind in many subjects and are under pressure to
catch up. Incorporating visual art forms would impede them from finishing their terms
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scheme of work, the syllabus on the whole and eventually negatively affect deaf students
academically.
The study revealed that the teachers acknowledged the importance of basic visual art
skills such as simple sketches and lettering in classrooms of the deaf but lacked the
needed skills to practice them to facilitate their lessons. Similarly, although Information
Communication Technology (ICT) provides a fine opportunity for them to manage visual
teaching strategies in their lessons, the teachers reported that ICT facilities are lacking in
the Schools for the Deaf.
5.Discussion
The notion is that special needs of the deaf require teaching that incorporates more visual
art forms such as pictures, illustration and animations than it would be for their hearing
counterparts. The use of pictures and diagrams are usually useful visual aids for all sizes
of classes, provided they are well designed and appropriately used. Depictions such as
pictures, paintings, drawings, charts, graphs, flow charts, and circles help to teach
effectively to the deaf who think visually. Stokes (2001) supports the fact that deaf
people are visual thinkers and so visual aids can be used to organize lessons for them;
provide interest and motivation; increase retention of information and learning and save
instructional and preparation time because they can be reused; aid Sign Language
communication and stress important points.
The views of Easterbrooks and Stoner (2006) and Marschark and Mayer (1998) indicate
that a curriculum stressing the mastery of grammar and speech instruction, with little
time for visual and practical learning may not be in line with deaf education. Because
deaf students are visual learners, they can only enrich their vocabulary visually. In this
regard, an alternative means of communication should be practised in the classroom so
that sensory stimulation and information can be provided, mostly visually. As the eye
replaces the ear in classrooms of students who are deaf, everything instructional should
be visual enough. Henley (1992) acknowledges that almost every child enjoys being read
to, spoken to or sung to and being entertained while learning something new. In the case
of the deaf, dramatic movements and gestures are all powerful generators of visual
images that can be used as motivational strategies to challenge them. They can be useful
if they are scaled to a mode of communication that accommodates the special needs of
the child.
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The deaf may be relying upon visual cues, signed language and body movement to learn
new things from the classroom. Even though the use of visual art forms; the paintings
and drawings as well as demonstration of gestures and movements in lesson
presentations carry important messages, the teachers at both Junior and Senior High
schools did not fully incorporate these in their lessons. The implication is that deaf
students in Ghana would have to access education provided for them in their classrooms
with much difficulty since they are taught lessons with little or no visual representations.
In such dire situation, lessons taught to the deaf may not be fully understood.
As Dale (1969) explains, the teaching method which involves learning from information
presented through verbal means or even verbal symbols only, is least effective. The most
effective methods involve concise, purposeful learning experiences through means such
as
hands-on or
field
experience,
manipulative,
active
participation,
teacher
demonstrations, relevant meaningful examples and the use of visual art forms. These
practices offer the deaf students a touch of reality and practicality.
Visual representation as an important form of communication when effectively
incorporated in classroom lessons can be used to teach science as it relates to concepts of
texture, colour, pattern, space and form. It can also be used to teach counting, graphs,
numbers, measurement, symbols, fractions, proportions and time which help meet the
challenges deaf students face in their education. For example, deaf students who are
unable to read from textbooks can learn concepts about foreign customs by analyzing
pictures and other visual media and demonstrate their knowledge of these customs by
constructing collage and murals of them. This instrumental strategy should not be used in
a singular fashion but rather combined with other strategies into a multisensory approach
that is particularly appealing to deaf students sense of sight. The use of art as a teaching
tool for deaf students is thus recognized as a viably effective tool because it can
strengthen memory and help in cognitive development of deaf.
The basis is that since deaf students are visual learners and some of the subjects studied
in Senior High/Technical School in Ghana are Vocational and Technical in nature,
teachers should employ all visual and practical means of teaching possible to impart
lessons to their deaf students.
6.Conclusion
It is still not clear what constitute special teaching in Schools for the Deaf. Without
being cynical, the Special Education Division of the Ghana Education Service has not
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been proactive enough with respect to ensuring a policy on visual teaching in Schools for
the Deaf. Although using visual elements in teaching and learning yields positive results
for deaf students, the teachers simply repeat teaching techniques that resemble those of
regular schools. The value of visual teaching in Schools for the Deaf has been
underestimated because the teachers do not have adequate skills to teach visually.
The Schools for the Deaf in Ghana are falling behind in terms of offering visual literacy
practices that meet the academic needs of the deaf. The only form of visual teaching
practiced in the Schools for the Deaf remains as embellishment to written text or as a
tool to teaching Sign Language. In the mean time, while Ghanaian Schools for the Deaf
grope over the policy of what defines special teaching, some measure can be adopted to
set things on course; the Activity method of teaching where deaf students receive
practical and visual guidelines to enable them do things for themselves should be
encouraged in the Schools for the Deaf.
At the Basic school level, the teachers should guide the students in most of the instructed
activities through the use of visuals. The teachers should employ a lot of body gestures to
demonstrate parts of their lessons. At the Senior High school level, lessons should be
backed by a lot of demonstrations and coaching from the teachers. The practice of a
method of teaching that gives deaf students hands-on experience as an effective learning
strategy should be adopted.
Teachers of the deaf should at least be given in-service training on rudiments of drawing,
sketching and lettering to enable them teach in a way that meets the visual needs of the
deaf.
As a matter of expediency, visual teaching should be the focal point of every education
formulated for the deaf.
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7.Reference
1. Dale, E. (1969). Audio-visual methods in teaching (3 rd ed.). New York: Holt
Rinehart & Winston.
2. Easterbrooks, S. R., & Stoner, M. (2006). Using a visual tool to increase
adjectives in the written language of students who are deaf or hard of hearing.
Communication Disorders Quarterly, 27(2), 95109.
3. Eubanks, P. K. (2011). Art is a visual language. Language, 23(1), 3135.
4. Gardner, H. (1993). Multiple intelligence: The theory in practice. New York:
Basic Books.
5. Henley, D. R. (1992). Exceptional children: Exceptional Art. Teaching art to
special needs. Massachusetts: Davis Publications, Inc.
6. Marschark, M., & Mayer, T. S. (1998). Interactions of language and memory in
deaf children and adults. Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, 39(3), 1458.
7. Oppong, A. M. (2003). Understanding and effectively educating the special needs
students. Winneba: University of Education, Winneba.
8. Schulz, J. B., & Turnbull, A. P. (1984). Mainstreaming handicapped studentsGuide for classroom teachers (2nd ed.). Bosten: Allyn and Bacon, Inc.
9. Smith, S. (1995). No easy answers-The learningdisabled child at home and at
school (Revised ed.). New York: Bantam Books.
10. Stokes, S. (2001). Visual literacy in teaching and learning: A literature
perspective. Electronic Journal for the Integration of Technology in Education,
1(1), 110.
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