Chattanooga Times Free Press

Measure gives students of sign language college credit

- BY SHEILA BURKE

NASHVILLE — The Tennessee Legislatur­e passed a measure that now will require, instead of just encourage, that students who take American Sign Language be given credit for their foreign language requiremen­ts.

Tennessee passed a law allowing kids to take ASL for credit back in 1990, but it was never implemente­d, said

Sen. Becky Massey, R-Knoxville, one of the bill’s main sponsors. Now, she said it will be. The legislatio­n requires the State Board of Education to create policies on how to implement the program.

“Current law only encourages ASL to be accepted as a foreign language, but did not require it to be accepted,” Sara Gast, a spokeswoma­n for the state Department of Education, said in an email. “The new law will require it.”

It doesn’t necessaril­y mean that sign language is automatica­lly going

to be taught in every school around the state, Massey said. Big school systems, she said, will probably start first.

A legislativ­e cost analysis of the bill said it’s not clear how much it would cost local schools to provide the classes or if Board of Education rules would require every district to do so. There are also questions about whether costs of the program could be offset by using money for existing foreign language classes to pay ASL courses.

There are approximat­ely 500,000 Tennessean­s who are deaf or hard of hearing and many use ASL to communicat­e, Massey said. There is great demand for sign-language interprete­rs, and knowing ASL is a marketable skill, she said.

More than 40 states have passed similar measures around the country, said Russell Rosen, an assistant professor and coordinato­r of the ASL Program at the College of Staten Island of the City University of New York.

“That an increasing number of states recognize and permit ASL to be taken as a foreign language is testament to their recognitio­n of the existence of deaf community and culture, the increased rights of deaf people, and the increasing desire of hearing people to learn it and embark on careers working with the deaf,” Rosen, who is deaf, said in an email.

Gov. Bill Haslam still has to sign the bill. An email to a spokeswoma­n for Haslam was not immediatel­y returned.

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Becky Massey

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