The site of the infamous 2nd International Congress on the Education of the Deaf.
Milan, Italy
The full name of the founder of Gallaudet university.
Edward Miner Gallaudet
Edward Booth and William J. Ijams opened the school in 1854.
Iowa School for the Deaf
The use of signed language was wholly instructed at most residential schools before 1880.
Manualism
In 1880, the national organization of the Deaf is founded in Cincinnati.
National Association of the Deaf
Wars that boosted employment opportunities for Deaf people during the 20th Century.
World War I and World War II
The wife of Alexander Graham Bell who was Deaf supported oralism.
Mabel Gardiner Hubbard
The site of the campus composed of Gallaudet University, the Columbian Institute (now Kendall Demonstration) and later the Model Secondary.
Kendall Green
The method that Alexander Graham Bell and his proponents preferred for teaching Deaf people.
Oralism
The name of the state association of the Deaf is founded by Edward Booth and other Deaf people in 1881.
Iowa Association of the Deaf
In 1911, the state government passed the bill that outlawed the use of signed language in the entire school system.
Nebraska
The wife of Edmund booth stayed at home taking care of children and business while Edmund was in California.
Mary Ann Walworth Booth
The Massachusetts school that advocates oralism founded by Gardiner Green Hubbard (AGB's father in law).
Clarke School for the Deaf
EMG and his proponents advocated the method to keep both manualism and oralism at schools.
The Combined Method
The national organization for the teachers for the Deaf is founded in 1850 in New York City.
The Conference of American Instructors of the Deaf
AGB wrote his infamous Memoir: Upon the Formation of a Deaf Variety of the Human Race in 1883 to migrate the "Deaf" race by___________.
outlawing marriages between Deaf people.
The former NAD president from Colorado created a film, The Preservation of Sign Language in 1913 to protect the value of signed language.
George W. Veditz
The school where Warren Robinson, a Deaf instructor, who promoted the expansion of industrial education programs to improve employment opportunities for Deaf people worked at.
The Wisconsin School for the Deaf
In 1960's, the popular method incorporated both oralism and manualism into the curriculum at schools for the Deaf.
Total Communication
The federal government provided the examination that did not allow Deaf applicants before President Taft rescinded it in 1909.
The Civil Service Examination
More than 300 Deaf people worked at two tire companies in Ohio after 1917.
Goodyear and Firestone
The school superintendent in Nebraska supported and enforced the notorious Oral Law of 1911.
Frank Booth
The first state that opened the school for the Colored Deaf.
North Carolina in 1879.
Today more residential schools for the Deaf adopted the more effective method that advocates the use of ASL and written English.
The Bilingual/Bicultural Approach
Edward Booth edited and later owned the local newspaper, 1856- 1905.
The Anamosa Eureka