A national deaf teacher training workshop began on
Monday at Beijing Normal University, the first ever professional
teacher training to target deaf teachers in China.
The workshop, jointly sponsored by Save the Children
(UK) and China Disabled Persons' Federation, is designed for deaf
teachers in schools, who teach mainly through sign
language.
Five weeks' training will be provided annually for
five years, offering professional teacher training to the majority
of deaf teachers in China, said Zhao Zhonghua, Deputy Director of
Save the Children (UK) China Program.
The first workshop covers the development of special
needs education in China and difficulties in implementing the new
curriculum as well as classroom techniques, teaching observations
and sign language study.
It is estimated that in 2004 about 80,000 people with
impaired hearing attended special education schools or special
education classes in China and they were taught by around 200 deaf
teachers.
The deaf teachers mostly graduated from one of three
special education universities such as Changchun University,
Technical School for the Deaf of Tianjin University of Technology
and the Special Education College of Beijing Union
University.
Many of them serve as teachers of fine arts at schools
for the deaf. Due to the language barriers and other difficulties,
teacher training for deaf teachers has been scarce in recent years,
preventing deaf teachers from playing a greater role at schools for
the deaf.
"We expect to develop this training workshop into a
barrier-free one," said Xiao Yu, research and education project
officer of Save the Children.
(Xinhua News Agency July 12, 2006)
|