Fifty percent of deaf people read at or below a fourth-grade level.
Onudeah “Oni” Nicolarakis, born deaf, has taught deaf and hearing students and is earning her Ph.D. Her research focus is helping deaf people become proficient writers: “My preschool communicated with parents through writing, and my mother always asked me what I wanted to tell them. I recognized writing’s power to express something others can understand. Written language is the map of spoken language.”
At New York City’s , once exclusively for deaf students, Nicolarakis taught hearing children fluent in signing (their parents were deaf) and others eager to learn. Language acquisition is “messy — it doesn’t have to be perfect,” she says. “Make contact, have interactions, and language develops in an organic way.”