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FSCJ Hosting 'Deafology' Events To Help The Hearing Understand Deaf Culture

Claudia Garcia

This month, Florida State College at Jacksonville is holding events to help hearing people understand deaf culture.

Seminars called “Deafology 101” kicked off the month.

Their purpose was to expose people of all ages to the deaf community, teach appropriate terminology, and allow hearing people to interact with deaf people by turning off their voices and learning some basic sign language skills.

Rachelle Settambrino is a deaf professor at FSCJ who teaches American Sign Language. Through an interpreter, she says the programs taught communication strategies and some dos and don’ts of deaf culture.

“You can text back and forth or write back and forth. If you know sign, sign back and forth or gesture,” she says. “And in general, deaf people can read and write. We have eyes; we are not blind. Braille is for blind people. So, those are a lot of the misconceptions encountered as deaf people.”

Next Tuesday and Wednesday, the school will host two performances by a deaf actor, and a lunch where people will be encouraged to practice sign language.

John Maucere is the star of “No Ordinary Hero: The Superdeafy Movie.” He will perform in American Sign Language twice on Tuesday, Feb. 23: at 10 a.m. at the FSCJ Kent Campus, 3939 Roosevelt Boulevard, Room  F-128; and at  6:30 p.m. at the downtown campus, 101 W. State St., Room A-1068.

Then on  Wed., Feb. 24, from 11:45 a.m. to 1 p.m., the “open campus” at 9911 Old Baymeadows Road will host a signing lunch at the campus Subway restaurant to allow people to practice American Sign Language skills and interact with the community.

Jessica Palombo oversees local news at WJCT News 89.9 and Jacksonville Today. With a master’s degree in broadcast and digital journalism from Syracuse University and bachelor's in journalism from the University of Florida, Jessica is a nearly lifelong resident of Jacksonville. You may have once seen her on a local community theater stage. These days, you can most likely catch her reading a book in a school pickup line.
Claudia Garcia is a student at Florida State College at Jacksonville. Originally from Colombia, she comes to Jacksonville after living and working in France and Brazil. She is fluent in English, Spanish, French, Portuguese and American Sign Language and once worked as a translator at the American embassy in Brazil.