1. Sign into Twitter, if you don't have an account, you can create one. Go to Twitter.com and follow
the directions.
2.Turn on your GPS settings. This is important in an emergency for Responders to know which
district to dispatch from, and how to find you if you need help.
3. Include #demx in every tweet about the test.
4. Follow @XpressiveHandz and @Deaf_Emergency.
5. FYI: We are only collecting tweets to #demx.
The number sign # before a tweet is called a "hashtag". Our topic is Deaf Emergency X, shortened for this purpose as #demx.
Hashtags are simply a topic with a # in front of it, such as #demx we are using in regards of discussing Nov 9 National test being conducted by FEMA. It is like following a channel on the old CB or ham radio or tv station. It is topical, dedicated to either the topic, or group of people, such as #deaf #ASL #disability #hardofhearing #HOH. If you have a twitter account, check these out by using the "search" at the top of your twitter screen, then you can "save" the search when you find this topic. You will see a timeline of all tweets associated with the hashtag.
Stephanie Jo Kent put together a few ideas we are looking for:
* #demx EAS Alert received by ______ (tv, internet, SMS, text, etc)
* #demx EAS Alert received via interpreter over ______ (tv, in person, etc)
* #demx EAS Alert not received
* demx EAS Alert info clear
* demx EAS Alert info not clear
These are some questions we will be asking:
Q1 Which local First Responders are BEST at communicating with the Deaf?
Q2 Which Deaf Community is CHAMP with communicating with First Responders?
Q3 Which way of communicating was BEST? English test or ASL interpretation?
Hearing people are watching, hearing people care. Your #demx tweets matter!
This Prezi Vlog is created by Stephanie Jo Kent. You will find her bio and a link to her website below the video. Press the arrow key after each presentation to view the next series of information. We have 2 days to get this out. Let's do our Deaf Community Proud and Show the strength of our numbers and be SEEN and HEARD. Help us improve the Emergency Alert System for ALL our American Citizens.
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More about Stephanie Jo Kent in her own words:
I earned my Certificate of Interpretation (from the National Registry of Interpreters for the Deaf, United States) in 1998, after professional training in Indiana during the early ’90s under the wonderful influence of the BiBi Committee at the Indiana School for the Deaf. While continuing work within the Deaf community, I earned a Master’s of Education in Social Justice Education and am now in the final writing stages for a Ph.D. in Communication. The topic of my dissertation is “Simultaneous Interpretation and Shared Identity in the European Parliament.” Fieldwork at the EP was funded by a US Fulbright Grant (2008-2009). Many of the insights informing this research are the result of interactions with empowered members of American Deaf Culture.
I have presented at sign language interpreting and ASL Studies conferences (such as RID’s national conference and the American Sign Language Teachers Association), international conferences on community interpretation (Critical Link), and given presentations to Translation Studies and European Studies departments at European universities (e.g., Heriot-Watt University and the University of Edinburgh, Vrije University Brussels, and Ghent University). Several articles and chapters have made it into publication, one of which has been translated into German. I have also taught several courses in several disciplines, particularly sociology and communication, both online and in traditional classrooms at the community college and university levels. I am most jazzed by being able to combine online instruction with face-to-face interaction: the potentials of learning and collaboration using this dual-format have barely begun to be explored.
My work, both as a professional interpreter and as a researcher and teacher grounded in the discipline of communication (specifically, language and social interaction) involves the intersection of discourse and dynamics. “Meaning” may appear symbolically – as words or signs, but meaningfulness arises from combining the way people generally talk (what is said and not said) with their behaviors while working together on a common task, such as taking up roles in groups, enacting particular identities, or accomplishing common and divergent goals. This is the intersection of language and social interaction where social change happens.
Visit Stephanie's website:
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