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	<title>We Cue! &#187; Danielle</title>
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	<description>Discussion on how to live, learn, and work using Cued Speech</description>
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		<title>How Cued Speech Found Me</title>
		<link>http://wecue.net/2010/02/how-cued-speech-found-me/</link>
		<comments>http://wecue.net/2010/02/how-cued-speech-found-me/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 20 Feb 2010 18:27:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Danielle</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Personal Stories]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[It was in the summer of 1999 when I stumbled upon Cued Speech. Â I had just finished my freshman year of college at Roger Williams University and was getting ready to head down to Washington, DC to participate in LEAP (Leadership Enrichment Adventure Program), a leadership program designed for oral deaf and hard of hearing [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It was in the summer of 1999 when I stumbled upon Cued Speech. Â I had just finished my freshman year of college at Roger Williams University and was getting ready to head down to Washington, DC to participate in LEAP (Leadership Enrichment Adventure Program), a leadership program designed for oral deaf and hard of hearing college age students. Â I&#8217;ll admit I was a bit nervous, after all this would be the first time I&#8217;d be around this many individuals with hearing loss. Â Although I grew up oral and was fully mainstreamed into my hometown public school this was new, uncharted territory for me. Â I typically was always &#8220;the only one&#8221; in my school that had a hearing loss using listening and spoken language. Â So I inquired with the program directors at AGBell to see if there were any other participants who wouldn&#8217;t mind meeting up before the start of LEAP. Â  Sure enough, I was connected to another participant. Â I decided to fly down to Pennsylvania a few days prior to the program to meet her and from there we&#8217;d drive together to DC. Â It didn&#8217;t take long for me to realize that she and her family were using a very unique communication system, one I hadn&#8217;t seen before! Â Of course being full of questions I wanted to know more and quickly found myself learning Cued Speech in a matter of two days. Â I carried my little Cued Speech card (one little business sized card contains the entire system) around for the next week and took every opportunity I had to practice my new skill.</p>
<p>What an exciting time! Â It was then I recognized the value and impact Cued Speech could have in my educational environment. Â As a child, I loved school and my hunger for knowledge was insatiable. Â I got what I needed and thrived, yet I was facing an opposite reaction to college. Â Frustration was high on the list of emotions I was experiencing. Â Freshman year of college was rockyÂ due to the inability to access my academic curriculum in the same manner as my typically hearing peers.</p>
<p>At LEAP I found the missing &#8220;key&#8221;. Â While a personal FM system coupled with lipreading was an appropriate accommodation for me to access my education growing up in the public school system, unfortunately the same didn&#8217;t ring true in college. Â The lecture halls were bigger, the professors &#8220;didn&#8217;t get it&#8221; and I was surrounded by new classmates who didn&#8217;t have the first hand knowledge of what to do with a deaf classmate who looked and sounded just like them. Â I tried a sign language interpreter and although sign was effective for me in social situations, it just didn&#8217;t work for me academically, thus calculus, organic chemistry and marine biology became more confusing. Â Although I tried, I&#8217;m not a native signer and I recognized that immediately. Â I needed my instruction in my native language.</p>
<p>Cued Speech was a tool necessary to access my education, the education I was paying loads of money for; in my first language, English. Â Yes, the cliche &#8220;Cued Speech opened doors for me&#8221; rang true. Â No longer struggling to acquire lecture information or participate in group activities and discussions, I excelled in the classroom and was afforded the opportunity to fully immerse myself into my college community without worries of &#8220;What did I miss today?&#8221; or &#8220;What time is the tutoring center opening tomorrow morning?&#8221; hanging over my head. Â The light at the end of the tunnel suddenly became visible again. Â I found myself learning with ease, enjoying classes and loving college!</p>
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