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Adamescu participated in international conferences, giving televised interviews, and consulting with educators and students. [4] In 2015 he became a member of the board of directors of Sense International Romania, a nonprofit organization dedicated to those with deafblindness. [ 6 ]
This experience grew into Nalaga'at (meaning "Please Touch" in Hebrew), the only professional deaf-blind theater company in the world. The Na Laga'at theater provides a permanent ongoing stage for the only ensemble in the world whose actors are deaf, blind, and deafblind, and to allow them artistic self-expression. 'Kapish" Events Hall.
WFD aims to promote the human rights of deaf people worldwide, by working closely with the United Nations (with which it has consultative status) and various UN agencies such as the International Labour Organization and the World Health Organization. [2] WFD is also a member of the International Disability Alliance (IDA).
Helen Keller, American author, disability rights advocate, political activist and lecturer, first deafblind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree (1904) [2] Pierre Gorman, Australian librarian, academic and educator of children with disabilities, first deaf person to receive a PhD at Cambridge University (1960). [3]
The CSUN Conference was built to be an event for researchers, practitioners, exhibitors, end users, speakers and other participants to share knowledge and best practices in the field of assistive technology. The event is attended by accessibility experts, advocates, people with disabilities, governments and business.
On June 1, 1972, the college was renamed California State University, Northridge; by then the Fall enrollment of deaf students exceeded one hundred for the first time.. Pursuant to Assembly Bill 1923, the Trustee's Committee on Educational Policy designates CSUN as a professional center for training deaf persons; CSUN administration then established a "Center on Deafness" to coordinate the ...
The deafblind community has its own culture, comparable to those of the Deaf community. Members of the deafblind community have diverse backgrounds but are united by similar experiences and a shared, homogeneous understanding of what it means to be deafblind. [6] Some deafblind individuals view their condition as a part of their identity. [7]
1880: The Second International Congress on Education of the Deaf happened in 1880 in Milan, Italy. It is commonly known as "The Milan Conference". The conference held deliberations from September 6, 1880, to September 11, 1880, declared that oral education was superior to manual education, and decided to ban the use of sign language in school.