Jeevan Gnanodaya Spring 2009 Proposal Project Website: view.php?p=84

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Jeevan Gnanodaya Spring 2009 Proposal Project Website: http://www.ashanet.org/projects/p roject-view.php?p=84

Transcript of Jeevan Gnanodaya Spring 2009 Proposal Project Website: view.php?p=84

Page 1: Jeevan Gnanodaya Spring 2009 Proposal  Project Website:  view.php?p=84

Jeevan Gnanodaya Spring 2009 Proposal

Project Website:http://www.ashanet.org/projects/project-view

.php?p=84

Page 2: Jeevan Gnanodaya Spring 2009 Proposal  Project Website:  view.php?p=84

Project Description Jeevan Gnanodaya School for the Deaf is a wing of the Jeevan Gnanodaya

Charitable Trust.

It has been functioning in Chengalpet since 1989. The school shelters and educates speech and hearing impaired kids from poor, rural backgrounds.

When children are admitted their hearing level is determined and they are given the hearing aid equipment necessary for them. They are provided special speech therapy classes in addition to the regular curriculum.

The school has also started an ITI for hearing-impaired children where they will

acquire technical and industry-based skills like fitting, turning, carpentry etc. Some vocational skills like chalk making , tailoring are also being imparted to the children.

All the facilities provided by the school are free, including food and lodging.

They started with 5 students (in 1989) and the school now has 147 (~40 day scholars, rest hostel) students and classes up to X as of 2008. XI started this yr.

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Purpose / Goals With their focus mainly on children with hearing disabilities,

most of them (at least 90%) have profound hearing loss, the project's goals are mainly two-fold:

* Provide formal education to children till Class 12, with necessary speech therapy along the way. Preference is given to students hailing from very poor families and to children who have profound hearing losses (meaning a hearing threshold of close to 90dB).

* Industrial Training: Skills such as turning, fitting etc. -- achieved via the ITI.

Since the ITI started, placement opportunities have become brighter, and students are getting reasonably good jobs.

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Organization Description In addition to the school for the deaf, which Asha for

Education is associated with, the trust also runs a nursery and primary school in Chengalpet (for "normal" children), helps with tuitions for slightly senior children.

Secondary Focus: Vocational training Area: Rural Number of Children: 147 Number of Teachers: 16 School: 120, ITI: 27 Girl/Boy Ratio: School: 33:87 ITI: 3:24 Student/Teacher Ratio: 9 : 1 (Govt. Regulation – 1:7) 18 can be accommodated for each yr of ITI

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Asha's involvement with JGSeattle: Salaries for “untrained” teaching and non-teaching staff. This is a big component of

their yearly budget.

Cornell: Has funded them something small two years ago, and is not very active on the financial front now. However, they had submitted a proposal to WAH 2008, and so are still in touch with the project.

Urbana-Champaign: Helped purchase new "behind the ear type" hearing aids for ITI students, and regular

"pocket type" hearing aids for younger children in the first year. Funded the salaries of specially trained sign language instructors who are a recent

addition at the school. The latter was actually a pretty in-depth learning effort between Asha-UC, and the project, and there was a collaboration with a professor from Gallaudet .

A couple of professors from the university are going to be visiting JG in Sep/Oct later this year, and will be interning for 3 weeks or so.

Atlanta: Funded partly the purchase of a van for Jeevan Gnanodaya, which was a critical need at that point of time.

Others: Boston/MIT, Silicon Valley (Initial Proposal)

No other NGO support – all others are individual donors

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Follow-Up Questions

Q. How many students are there in the school? Q. What are the other NGO's who are supporting JG? Q. Who is supporting the marriage hall? Q. Do they have a corpus fund? Q. When was the last site visit? Q. Is this a one time proposal or should it be for multiple years?

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Some recent student updates

2009 – 11th grade added, to be followed by 12th in 2010.

14 wrote 10th, 1 failed. Rest passed. The 3 girls who passed -> 11th. Boys preferring to choose ITI (easier, more job opportunities quicker)

11th: Only accounts elective offered for now. Home visits started in Jan - March, as well as

parents’ visit to school, 1hr a day. Last Site Visit: June 2008, Cornell Next site Visit: June and July 2009

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Key Funding (from WAH 2008 Proposal) Asha for Education – Salaries + other expense Monday charity club – Food Lalitha Ramakrishna – Note Books & Books P.S.SB Matriculation Chennai –Uniforms, Hearing aid,

Bathrooms Toilet Kalaimamani Pittukali Chennai- Food Mr. Dhanraj Chennai – Educational materials Mrs. Jayashree Jaganathan & Mrs. Priya Ranganatha

U.S.A- Hearing Aids Maintanance 3 Ladies Club in chennai – For food Dr. Nirmala Muthaiyan – Medical TN Govt - Food

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Teachers at JG Till 2008, mostly self-trained, except for 3. 2008 - Hired 4 teachers, 3 with a B.Ed degree and 1 with a diploma; 3

female and 1 male teacher (Vivekananda University, Coimbatore) JG provides accommodation for all the lady teachers so they can stay

nearby. All these teachers are specially trained to teach in sign language and also through regular speech therapy, lip movements, etc., and will be asked to handle the middle, higher classes in school along

with the I.T.I. Also hired 3 teachers from a training institute in Kanyakumari, who

were not trained to teach in sign language, but only in regular speech based techniques. These teachers will be assigned to primary classes (they are specially trained to handle younger children).

All teachers equipped to teach Tamil and English. School: 6 trained, 7 “untrained” ITI: 3 Instructors, all male, +1 visiting instructor

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Trained vs. Untrained teachers Untrained teachers have more experience with the students and know

how to cover required portion at the appropriate pace, feel personally committed and willing to put in extra time/efforts.

Trained teachers don’t have experience with setting pace – but are seeing progress due to SL knowledge. Treat JG as a workplace, look for better opportunities.

Mrs Amruthavalli – experienced teacher of 30 years, completed Level C, comes on Sundays to talk to all teachers, discuss new ideas, impart best practices, fine-tune teaching methods. Teaches additional speech techniques. Given some enumeration.

Govt requires ~50% to be trained teachers

Salary Trained: Rs. 6K + Benefits (Food, Accommodation, Travel) ~ Rs. 9K Untrained: Rs.4K - 5K L.I.C, welfare functions

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Teaching Techniques (2007 – 2009) When a child gets admitted, a medical check up is done to determine the extent hearing loss,

how many ears have gotten affected etc. and appropriate hearing aids are given. (Retained after child graduates)

Then, they begin with helping the child try to make sounds – this is hard, especially because some of the sounds need to be gotten out from the stomach, and communication with a deaf child is not easy. The younger the child is, easier it is for it to learn - practically impossible for children above 10 years of age.

Then they try to teach the vowels, and alphabets, move on to more complex words(break them by the syllable). They’re also taught to distinguish between several emotions, and other sounds which have very similar lip movements.

Proper lip reading is taught by taking the aid of a mirror, and helping the child follow the teacher’s lip movements on the mirror. Just this would take nearly a year (3 months to get the sound out and 9 months to teach letters and words) for a typical child.

After this, the child enters 1st grade, where they begin to follow the regular TN state board syllabus. In each grade, before the class begins, the students are encouraged to speak amongst themselves – the teachers ask them casual questions about what they did the previous day, what they ate etc., just so that they make an

attempt to speak.

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Sign Language No formal sign language based teaching was used. Mr. Devarajan was not even aware of the existence of one, or its

advantages and disadvantages. Gestures (not to be confused with sign language) were used, nevertheless, whenever they are necessary. Students also typically resort to gesture based communication amongst themselves.

Dr. Madan Vashishta (himself deaf), from the U.S – Gallaudet University – has been working with JG to inform them of the benefits of SL and ISL.

4 teachers hired who have completed Level A of ISL Training (Indian Sign Language) (There are different levels in sign language training – A, B, C)

It will however take about 2 years for the kids to complete the first level itself. Following that, JG will have to consider hiring experts to help them proceed further. (Increase salary, low retention rate)

They've split classes into two sections – 1 to 5 and 6 to 9. They are not teaching this to Class 10 currently. Grades 1-5 go at a slower pace than grades 6-9. They are doing the transition into sign language slowly so that kids don’t lose ability to speak. No tests this year.

Concern: Kids will lose motivation to speak. Signing considered as “lazier” option. So need to maintain a balance.

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Issued faced by deaf children in getting into the ‘mainstream’: If treated well, no major problems with socializing. Most problems

purely due to the communication problem that arises because of their speech and hearing handicap – frustration due to glitches in smooth communication and this usually takes a turn for the worse.

Also, if there are too many deaf children at the same place (in a work environment), they tend to form a group and cause problems. (There have been some unpleasant experiences with a company where a group of deaf workers formed a union and created trouble.)

Few companies come voluntarily to give jobs to the deaf. Ones that do come forth due to sympathy factory.

Companies prefer “high-end” deaf schools that offer better training. (Balavidyalaya, CSI School for the Deaf, Clarke School for the Deaf)

Most jobs require relocation and a “local guardian” – so most students take jobs in and around Chengalpet.

Parental involvement is very minimal. JG keeps in touch with graduated students, contact them 3 times/yr.

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Government Funding Mainly for food – under a scheme for schools with hostels called

Maintenance Grant. Help cover expense of about 30% of the children in the age group 6-16

yrs. Amount of money from the government is about Rs. 50,000. There is no

government support in terms of books etc. He has been getting this grant for the last 7 years now, but is doubtful this year because it is election year.

Plans for self-sustainability Marriage Hall currently being constructed – expected to be finished by the

end of the year. By 2012, JG expected to stand on its own feet, assuming no other issues arise.

65 muhurtams/yr + 15 other events = 80 events 10 lakhs or so expected every month – and should help cover running

expenses pretty easily, only building tax needs to be paid. ITI Factory expected to raise income by 2011. Plan to use some of the money as a fixed deposit to generate interest.

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Asha Austin Proposal

2009-2019 School Yr Educational Materials

New, not supported before. For 109 students, as anticipated in Feb. Rest will be covered by JG. Don’t expect > 150 students

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Back-Up Today's Hearing Classification Hearing

Threshold 

Normal hearing -10 to 15 dB Slight hearing loss 16 to 25 dB Mild hearing loss 26 to 40 dB Moderate hearing loss 41 to 55 dB Moderately severe loss 56 to 70 dB Severe hearing loss 71 to 90 dB Profound hearing loss 91 to 120 dB Deaf below 120 dB