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Pioneers in Oral Deaf Education - Coggle Diagram
Pioneers in Oral Deaf Education
Bernard Engelsman
Taught the deaf in Germany without using signs
Founded The New York Institution for the Improved Instruction of Deaf Mutes in 1867
Strongly believed in oralism
School was renamed the Lexington School fro the Deaf three years later
Came to America in 1864
Gardiner Hubbard
Daughter Mabel was deafened by scarlet fever when she was four years old
Founded the Clarke School for the Deaf
Oral education was only allowed in Massachusetts because of Hubbard
Mabel married Alexander Graham Bell
Alexander Graham Bell
Mainly known for inventing the telephone
Bell was one of the biggest supporters of the oral method
Bell was a speech teacher
Affiliated with the School of Oratory at Boston University
Opened a teacher training school in Boston in 1872
First president of the American Association to Promote the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf
Yet found deaf people defective