Explore the growing digital archive of deaf history in Australia.
Learning Sequence: Language for Empowerment
Learning Area: English
Year Level(s): 10
Overview

Students analyse a ‘manifesto’ about the value of writing for a minority group – deaf people – to identify the author’s strategies for appealing to shared cultural knowledge, values and beliefs, and the experience of marginalization.
Students then analyse 2-3 historical texts for examples of language that includes or marginalizes deaf people.

Suggested Activities
Language for Empowerment

Students analyse a text to identify how it uses language with the aim of involving and empowering people.

Sources

‘Why Deaf People Must Write’ by Karen Lloyd (1980s)

Outcomes:

Students understand how language can have inclusive and exclusive social effects, and can empower or disempower people

Key Concepts/Vocabulary:

Language used to align the reader or indicate shared assumptions.

How Language Can Include or Marginalise People

Students compare texts to identify how they use language to include or marginalise people.

Sources

‘Why Deaf People Must Write’ by Karen Lloyd (1980s)
Letter to the Editor by Eli Noble (1950)
Public letter to members of the Australian Association for the Advancement of the Deaf by M. O. Wilson (1930s)
‘Deaf and Dumb Land’ by Ernest Abraham (early 1900s)
Other old texts written by deaf people, as appropriate

Download Checked Items

Welcome to the Deaf History Collections

We acknowledge the traditional custodians of Country throughout Australia and pay our respects to Elders past and present. We extend that respect to all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander visitors to our site, recognising the long, rich, complex and unjustly disregarded histories of First Nations peoples in Australia.
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