Deaf Culture Is Shifting As Hearing Tech Gains Traction (HBO)
Today, more than 40 percent of American children born deaf receive cochlear implants. The technology effectively restores hearing by bypassing the ear and delivering audio information directly to the brain. The vast majority of deaf children who are implanted develop hearing and speaking skills comparable to their hearing peers, thus allowing them the option to “mainstream” into normal schools. Deaf education in the U.S. has gone through many phases. American Sign Language (ASL) is currently the dominant mode of instruction in deaf schools, but there have been periods where ASL was banned and students were forced to speak and lip-read, an ineffective approach known as oralism. ASL has now gained legitimacy and been shown to include the deep grammar and syntax found in spoken languages. It is also the wellspring of deaf culture, a proud community wary of historical attempts to assimilate them into a hearing world. As more parents opt for cochlear implants, VICE News explores their impact on the medical condition that gave rise to a cultural identity. Read: "Prisons basically ignore the Americans With Disabilities Act, leaving a third of inmates facing abuse and neglect" - http://bit.ly/2jwqCX4 Subscribe to VICE News here: http://bit.ly/Subscribe-to-VICE-News Check out VICE News for more: http://vicenews.com Follow VICE News here: Facebook: / vicenews Twitter: / vicenews Tumblr: / vicenews Instagram: / vicenews More videos from the VICE network: https://www.fb.com/vicevideo

Deaf culture versus the cochlear implant

Emotional Moment Teen Hears For First Time With Cochlear Implants

MS NOW speaks to the crew of Artemis III

The Silent Child | Oscar® Winning Short Film

Why Sign Language Was Banned in America | Otherwords

Golden Retriever Meets Completely Broken Rescue for the First Time

Meet The Teen With The World’s Most Advanced Bionic Hands | This Morning

America's Founders: Friends of the Deaf - Fall 2016

Deaf People Answer Commonly Googled Questions About Being Deaf

Colin Farrell Opens Up About His Son With Angelman Syndrome | PEOPLE

Marlee Matlin on Cochlear Implants and Deaf Culture | World Science Festival

I'm Deaf, But I'm Not...

"DEAF" - Shortfilm

Through the Eyes of Deaf Children

What If You Couldn't Talk? | Justina Miles | TEDxPenn

Sudden Hearing Loss, Deafness, Cochlear Implant Journey

Talking With Deaf People: Expectations vs. Reality

‘I Woke Up One Morning and Had a Thick Geordie Accent’ | This Morning

Between Sound & Silence: How Technology is Changing Deafness | Op-Docs

