Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

The future is looking bright

W. Pa. School for Deaf plans $2 million expansion to help younger children

- By Linda Wilson Fuoco

At breakfast, dinner or any family gathering, imagine covering your ears and being unable to know what people are saying. Take the scenario a step further and imagine you have no way to tell relatives your thoughts, feelings or needs.

That’s what it’s always like for young children who are deaf. About two to three children out of every 1,000 in the U.S. are born with a detectable level of hearing loss in one or both ears, according to the National Institutes of Health.

More than 90 percent of deaf children are born to “hearing parents.” That means the vast majority of those mothers and fathers do not know American Sign Language and have no effective way to communicat­e with their deaf children

The moment is “magical” when very young children who are deaf or hard of hearing realize they have learned to communicat­e with family, friends and classmates, said Steven E. Farmer, CEO of the Western Pennsylvan­ia School for

the Deaf in Edgewood.

Magical moments happen every day for the 40 children — 3- to 6-years-old — who attend WPSD’s Children’s Center. The children’s center is expanding to keep pace with steadily increasing enrollment. The $2 million constructi­on project will start in October and should be completed by spring.

The school is converting 10,000 square feet of former dormitorie­s into classrooms, an art room, a mini-theater, an ASL classroom and a multipurpo­se space.

Other therapeuti­c support services based in different buildings on the 21-acre campus will be moved into the expanded center, making it a one-stop-shop for families .

The school has a $175,000 grant from the Redevelopm­ent Authority of Allegheny County to help with the improvemen­ts and is doing other fundraisin­g to cover remaining costs.

The 149-year-old Western Pennsylvan­ia School for the Deaf teaches students through 12th grade and up to age 21.

The children’s center is an intensive program that teaches reading and other regular preschool subjects, as well as communicat­ion skills for 3- to 6-year-old children. Each week they attend classes from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. Monday through Thursday, and a halfday on Fridays.

For younger children — newborns and those up to 3 years old — the staff makes home visits because early interventi­on boosts the rate of positive outcomes.

When the expansion project is completed, eight students from WPSD’s Children’s House will move into the space and become part of the children’s center.

Children’s House is a Montessori-based oral preschool. Five of the students can hear, but all eight have a connection to hearing loss.

The children’s center staff of eight teachers, nine aides, two speech/language pathologis­ts and therapists — occupation­al, physical and vision — all use American Sign Language. Some are deaf, others are not. Most students and their parents choose to learn ASL. Some children learn how to speak and at least one uses an iPad to communicat­e.

“It’s critical that we work with parents,” including offering them class instructio­n in ASL, Mr. Farmer said. He uses ASL in interviews and meetings and his interprete­r, Josh Waterhouse, translates.

Mr. Farmer was born profoundly deaf 50 years ago in a hearing family. Growing up in Maryland, for several years he attended a school for the deaf, but graduated from a public high school. He was the only deaf student, “and that can be lonely,” he said.

He used ASL and interprete­rs in college, where he earned bachelor, master’s and Ph.D. degrees.

The children’s center is a happy place, with smiling children and cheerfully­bright walls, furniture and rugs.

Popular with parents and children is Christie Homell, who teaches ASL at the children’s center.

“I have experience­d what my students have experience­d. I am deaf,” Ms. Homell said, speaking through an interprete­r. “Growing up I was frustrated. I was mainstream­ed” in public schools for a while “and that was a challenge. There were very few deaf students.”

When she enrolled in WPSD as a boarding student in the sixth grade, “I fell in love. I did not know so many kids were deaf,” said Ms. Homell, who has worked at WPSD for 19 years because “I love this place and I care a lot about the kids.”

 ?? Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette photos ?? Payton Fischman, 3, jokes with teacher Shelley Zelei after cutting shapes from paper at Western Pennsylvan­ia School for the Deaf in Edgewood.
Steve Mellon/Post-Gazette photos Payton Fischman, 3, jokes with teacher Shelley Zelei after cutting shapes from paper at Western Pennsylvan­ia School for the Deaf in Edgewood.
 ??  ?? Xander Zeolla, left, laughs with classmate Roderick Mihoerck after the wall the two were building collapsed at Western Pennsylvan­ia School for the Deaf.
Xander Zeolla, left, laughs with classmate Roderick Mihoerck after the wall the two were building collapsed at Western Pennsylvan­ia School for the Deaf.

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