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October 13, 2008

Information Sheet in ASL

Filed under: Blogs — Tags: , , , — deafscribbler @ 6:48 pm

Yet another example of how vlogs serve the Deaf Community in a way that few, if any, communities are served–

NAD and the United States IRS have teamed up to create public service announcements in ASL, made available online regarding tax filing information.

Right now, there are only three vlogs available concerning the 2007 Economic Stimulus Check at http://blogs.nad.org/advocacy/esp/ However, NAD recently announced that four more will be created and made available at a later date. 

If you view the first vlog, you will notice that it uses graphics to buttress the message much in the same way a print information sheet would (the part where the signer indicates downwards to an onscreen graphic of an IRS check).

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How is this unique to the Deaf Community? This is an entirely visual presentation made in ASL (audio voiceover and open-captioning notwithstanding). Other communities that have similar needs would be minority language speakers within the United States. The IRS website publishes information in a wide array of languages. Closer still would be illiterate minority language speakers. The IRS website can easily create podcasts/audio clips of a person speaking in the minority language. Only a Deaf person would need an entirely visual clip– a vlog.

Deaf people would have a choice of viewing English text, reading on-screen captions, and seeing the ASL interpretation of the information presented. A number of communication modalities are provided for Deaf members that come from different parts of the Deaf Community spectrum. 

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It would be interesting to speculate regarding the development of these PSAs. Why was a woman chosen to present these? Was it because she was the best signer available out of the Washington DC pool of IRS employees? Was it because she’s a woman? To me, she projects a matronly image, which may be conducive to giving advice. As the person in these PSAs, she represents the face of the IRS to Deaf people who view these PSAs.

Another issue is how easily are these PSAs found? I was directed to one link from the NAD announcement, and had to follow another link on the first page to find another page with these PSAs. Spanish language links are available up front at the top of most of the IRS webpages I navigated through, but the ASL PSAs were further down the page once I found the correct page (”Flyers, public service announcements and other marketing products for IRS’s partners and others” to “Economic Stimulus Payment Basics (three 30 sec clips) American Sign Language with English transcript” which led me to the NAD blog webpage that I’ve already posted above).

July 9, 2008

Immediate Dissemination of News & Translation

Filed under: About — deafscribbler @ 3:40 pm

NAD has set up a blog/vlog to post information that comes out of their national conference going on right now in New Orleans.

http://blogs.nad.org/NADConference/

Part of what makes the web useful is the ability to immediately disseminate information. No longer do Deaf people have to wait for the conference to be over to find out what has been discussed, and about new developments. Of course, NAD will publish news about the conference in their newsletter/magazine, but members and other interested parties don’t have to wait for that to come out. They can go to the website.

Plus, NADmag (the name of their publication) can’t sign to you. A vlog can sign to you.

The most recent posting is an interview with Bernard Bragg, world renowed Deaf actor and storyteller. For the same interview to be published in NADmag, the staff would have to translate ASL into English text, which carries the possibility of altering Bragg’s intent behind his responses. One interesting thing to note is that the interview does not have a transcript forthcoming, while interviews with Phyllis Frelich and Bobbie Beth Scoggins both have messages indicating a “transcript to come.” 

July 1, 2008

Yeah, A Troll

Filed under: About — deafscribbler @ 11:41 am

I’m not particularly troubled because these sort of people will always find something to make fun of; if not hearing, then it’d be weight, religion, ethnicity, music tastes, spelling ability, and so on.

troll's message making fun of deaf youtube user

June 29, 2008

Thoughts on DIGITAL DISABILITY

Filed under: About — deafscribbler @ 12:12 pm

 

Goggin and Newell wrote a comprehensive look at Disability and how it applies to the Digital world (by digital, they include any and all information sharing technology that transmit information through ones and zeroes over phone lines and other broadband means). This is a wide umbrella that includes television, the Internet, and mobile telephony.

While not directly addressing the issue of blogging (in part because it was still new at the time of publication), the book provides plenty of ideas that can be connected to the Deaf World and blogging. 

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June 27, 2008

Thoughts on WE’VE GOT BLOG

Filed under: Academia — deafscribbler @ 7:03 pm

 

[Edited for correct attribution]

 We’ve Got Blog: How Weblogs are Changing Our Culture (2002) is an anthology, selected by the editors of Perseus Publishing, of various posts gleaned from the web on the then-burgeoning culture of blogs. Most of the essays are from 1999-2001; several authors, including Rebecca Blood, point to 1999 as being the widespread start of blogging. Some of the contributors are from the same pool of pioneering bloggers, the so-called “A-list” bloggers, such as Cameron Barrett, Derek M. Powazek, Rebecca Mead and others. I’m not gonna bother linking to their blogs, you can Google ‘em yourself. Most of the bloggers talked about are more of the A-listers as well, along with other notable bloggers such as journalist/blogger Dan Gillmor. At this time, the book reads more like a history book than a picture of current trends.

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June 26, 2008

The Readings

Filed under: Academia — deafscribbler @ 8:27 pm

The texts I have to read through for this course:

We’ve Got Blog: How Weblogs are Changing Our Culture. Perseus,
2002.

Goggin, Gerard and Christopher Newell. Digital Disability: The Social Construction of
Disability in New Media.
 New York: Rowman & Littlefield, 2002.

Harold, Christine. OurSpace: Resisting the Corporate Culture of Control. Minneapolis &
London: U of Minnesota P, 2007.

Jenkins, Henry. Convergence Culture: How Old and New Media Collide.New York:
New York UP, 2006.

O’Reilly, Tim. “What is Web 2.0?” Design Patterns and Business Models for the Next
Generation of Software.”
http://www.oreillynet.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-is-web-20.html

Rheingold, Howard. “Smart Mobs: The Power of the Mobile Many.” Smart Mobs: The
Next Social Revolution.
Cambridge, MA: Basic Books, 2002. 157-182.

Deaf Read Channel: http://live.yahoo.com/deafread

Deaf Times/Deaf Culture Centre Website:
http://deaftimes.net/index.php/news/article/59364/

among others. Will post thoughts about each as I gather my notes in some coherent form.

First Thoughts

Filed under: About, Academia, Blogs, Vlogs — deafscribbler @ 1:46 pm

 

Here we go. This is my first post. This is the first time I’ve used WordPress, although I have used LiveJournal as a blog host for several years. Now I’m sharing space on my friend’s blog server, lpoweronl, so thanks to him for that.   

So why am I doing this? Well, I’m working on my Master’s degree in English at the University of Texas. An old writer’s adage is to “write what you know.” I know life as a Deaf person, and I know the Internet has been an incredible accessibility tool for me as a Deaf person. For other Deaf people too as well. The Internet also has changed life for Hearing people as well. Blogging and wikis and other forms of collaborative information presentation have changed the way academics look at the way the English language is being used. Of course, other languages are being used too–not just English. The Internet isn’t limited to North America. People are able to express themselves in their native languages all over the web. And now the World Wide Web has evolved to include other ways of expressing language rather than text lining the monitor.

People are able to create audio podcasts to present their thoughts or even artwork (in terms of music and poetry). And technology and bandwidth improved, leading people to videocasts, small video presentations broadcast on the internet. The limits were stretched further now that news and performances and other material are now posted for all to view on the web.  Let’s not forget language, as I mentioned just a bit ago. 

 

 

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