After reading the monk, I learned a lot about the new culture of hearing impaired, I was fascinated by the story of Mark Drosbau. "The hardest battle a person must fight is to live in a world where someone will try to make you a person you do not want you every day. I will soon be taken into this book from this sentence and the mark I realized how difficult it is to find his identity because he was afraid of embarrassment as if there was something wrong or inappropriate, let's keep listening to his hearing It was made.
That monk was born again by Mark Drolsbaugh and Mark gradually lost his hearing when he heard the blind person sign the parents. His deaf parents prefer to sign communications, but Mark is promoted without sign language and is educated. His parents and grandparents are worried that this sign prevents speech and may limit his educational performance. Mark became increasingly ugly, but he worked hard to "pass" as a hearing. He later discovered this ambition ... deaf and hearing-impaired people face many problems in the world today. There are many jobs and activities today, and hearing impaired people may be difficult to do due to disability. There are obstacles to hindering or interfering with the fact that they are interested, or that they stop quitting by friends or neighbors. But today there are new and different technologies that will help deaf and hearing loss.
"The Deaf People Again" is the story of Mark Drosbau, aimed at showing the sultry sight of the world, how they live and struggle every day. The monks once again talked about the difficulty of hearing from the birth of Mark Drolsborg, the difficulty of hearing of first grade, mainstreaming, the difficulty of not knowing the pleasures and hearing loss culture of the deafness community until 20 generations . Mark talked about his mother's birth and started talking. He was born in Pennsylvania hearing-impaired parents Don and Sherry Drollbo. For his parents, Mark was able to learn to hear and talk when he was born and knew how to sign. When he became a freshman, it all changed. Mark began experiencing severe hearing impairment. His grandparents were told that Mark was taken to another doctor, hearing scholar and speech pathologist to try to solve his hearing loss.