From the heart and hand-delivered
- Share via
Danette Goulet
One by one, the students in Carol Jewell’s third-grade class silently
introduced themselves to their pen pal, Danielle Berman.
She nodded and smiled in perfect understanding.
While Jewell is teaching her students at Andersen Elementary School to
read and write, she is also teaching them Danielle’s language -- sign
language.
Danielle is 9 years old and has been deaf since birth.
Despite an initial shyness Wednesday morning, Danielle quickly warmed up
to the eager 8-year-olds who huddled around her, each trying to sign
their many questions to her.
“I asked her what kinds of books she likes to read,” said Sarah Colgate.
“She was really fun.”
Jewell did not teach the students sign language just for this one
occasion. She has been incorporating signing into her lessons for five
years.
Previously retired, Jewell went back to teaching kindergarten at Andersen
five years ago. She began using sign language to help teach phonetic
sounds to the children.
Children learn in different ways, Jewell said. All teachers use sight and
sound, but Jewell added “kinetic,” or physical, learning through signing,
which she said is a very powerful method for some children.
“It’s another way of learning, another avenue to broach,” she said. “Why
not hit them with everything?”She received confirmation of her theory
almost immediately.
Soon after incorporating sign language, Jewell had a meeting with a
student and his parents.
As the student read aloud to them, he stopped, unable to pronounce a word
that Jewell was sure he knew. So she signed the two syllables of the word
to him.
“He immediately said ‘Oh -- fat,”’ she recalled.
Now a third-grade teacher, Jewell continues to use sign language. She now
has nine students in her class who learned the basics of signing when
they were in her kindergarten class.
Emily Morris is one of those students and has loved the signing aspect of
class, said her mother, Cecilia.
“She would lie in bed at night and practice signing,” Cecilia Morris
said.
With Danielle, Jewell has found a means of bringing that language to
life. During a summer signing class, Jewell met Danielle and the idea was
born.
“One objective in the third grade is being able to write a personal
letter,” she said. “It ties in with their learning of language arts.”
After two months of writing letters back and forth, the pen pals finally
met Wednesday.
Every student was vying for Danielle’s attention.
“I think somebody who signs could really be best friends with her,” Sarah
said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.