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NCIEC. National Consortium of Interpreter Education Centers. Preview of New Curriculum for Deaf Interpreter Education. Jimmy Beldon and Eileen Forestal In behalf of NCIEC DI Curriculum Development Team. Consortium Mission .
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NCIEC National Consortium of Interpreter Education Centers
Preview of New Curriculum for Deaf Interpreter Education Jimmy Beldon and Eileen Forestal In behalf of NCIEC DI Curriculum Development Team
Consortium Mission to connect and collaborate with diverse stakeholders in order to create excellence in interpreting technical assistance cross-center collaboration communication dissemination resources educational opportunities knowledge transfer
National CenterNortheastern University NURIECNortheastern University WRIECWestern Oregon UniversityEl Camino College CATIE CenterSt. Catherine University GURIECGallaudet University MARIE CenterUniversity of Northern Colorado
www.nciec.org/ DI Initiative Purpose To improve access to interpreting services for individuals who are • Deaf, • Deaf-Blind, and • hard-of-hearing, • especially those underserved and at-risk adults and youths
www.nciec.org/ DI Initiative Outcome Advancement of the practice and education • Greater understanding of the role of the Deaf Interpreter • Competencies required for successful practice, & benefits offered by Deaf Interpreters • Resources and learning opportunities for and about Deaf Interpreters
www.nciec.org/ Deaf Interpreter Competencies NCIEC Deaf Interpreter Work Team (2010). Toward effective practice: competencies of the Deaf Interpreter. National Consortium of Interpreter Education Centers. For a copy of the full report, please go to: diinstitute.org/resources
Competencies of All Interpreters Generalist Competencies Specialty Competencies Mental Health Medical Legal Vocational Rehabilitation Video Relay, etc. • Theory and Knowledge • Human Relations • Language Skills • Interpreting Skills • Professionalism
Specialized Competencies • Foundational • Language, Culture and Communication • Consumer Assessment • Interpreting Practice • Elicitation Competencies • Production Competencies • Monitoring & Clarification competencies • Teaming Competencies • Professional Development
Specialized Competencies • Foundational • Language, Culture and Communication • Consumer Assessment • Interpreting Practice • Elicitation Competencies • Production Competencies • Monitoring & Clarification competencies • Teaming Competencies • Professional Development
Thanks to DI Work Team Partners Cynthia Napier Eileen Forestal Debbie Peterson Patrick Boudreault Jimmy Beldon Priscilla Moyers Carole Lazorisak Steven Collins Cathy Cogen Lillian Garcia Peterkin Alberto Sifuentes NCIEC Staff www.nciec.org
Current Grant Cycle 2010 - 2015 interpretereducation.org
interpretereducation.org DI Curriculum Development Team 2010 - 2015 James Lipsky, Lillian Garcia Peterkin, Cynthia Napier, Eileen Forestal, Stephanie Clark, Chris Kurz and Jimmy Beldon Curriculum & Resource Development for DI Preparation
Deaf Interpreter Preparation: A Comprehensive Curriculum • Module 1: Deaf Interpreters: Past, Present and Future • Module 2: Consumer Assessment • Module 3: Ethnic and Cultural Diversity • Module 4: Ethical Considerations and Challenges for Deaf Interpreters • Module 5: Practice to Theory for Deaf Interpreters • Module 6: Team Interpreting
Pilot of the Modules Road to Deaf Interpreting Program, Massachusetts • 18 month program • Meets once a month • Saturday all day and Sunday half day • 13 Deaf students • Four modules taught so far (March – June 2012) • Two more modules (Dec. 2012 and April 2013) • Parts of modules spiraled in other sessions
Example of One Module Practice to Theory for Deaf Interpreters
Title of Module: Practice to Theory for Deaf Interpreters Overview of Module: Purpose of the Module: Competencies: Anticipated Outcomes: Assessment:
Competencies • Competency # 2 (Language, Culture, and Communication Competencies) • Competency # 3 (Consumer Assessment Competencies) • Competency #4 (Interpreting Practice Competencies)
Units of Learning: Interpreting Practices • Unit 1: Translation • Unit 2: Consecutive Interpreting • Unit 3: Simultaneous Interpreting and Continuum of CI &SI • Unit 4: Mirror Interpreting • Unit 5: Considerations for Working with Consumers
Interpreting Theories (How they are applied to the practice of Deaf Interpreters) • Unit 6: Colonomos’ Process Model • Unit 7: Cokley’s Sociolinguistic Model • Unit 8: Gish’s Information Processing • Unit 9: Gile’s Effort Model • Unit 10: ASL-English Discourse in Interpreting
Units • Each unit contains all or most of below: • Lectures with PowerPoints • Videos of ASL translation of selected articles and readings • Videos for demonstrations and analysis of Deaf Interpreters at work • Observations of Deaf interpreters working in the community • Collaborative activities and learner presentations • Application of theory to practice and practice to theory • Videotaping • Self-analysis and peer analysis with instructor analysis
Module Assessment: • Pre-and post-tests • Class observation • Informal formative assessments • Participation • Participant Interviews • Out-of-class assignments • Instructor Interview
Next Steps? • Revised Modules • Find qualified Deaf trainers • Train the Trainers • Dissemination plan
DIInstitute.org Learning & Networking for & about the Deaf Interpreter
A Quick Survey • Are Deaf students enrolled in the IEP in your state? • Do the IEP include information/training about Deaf interpreter ? • Does the IEP provide HI/DI team training?
interpretereducation.org Questions & AnswersAny thoughts?Any suggestions?Miss something?
For more information, check out… Diinstitute.org Interpretereducation.org
interpretereducation.org Thank You! Contact us with Questions and Comments NCIEC DI Curriculum Development Team Lillian Garcia Peterkin l.garcia@neu.edu
www.interpretereducation.org Connect with us on Join our mailing list
The Consortium Centers are funded by grants from the U.S. Department of Education, Rehabilitation Services Administration, Training of Interpreters Program CFDA 84.160A and 84.160B.