Stephanie Feyne <stef...@gmail.com>: Mar 12 06:55PM -0400
Dear Colleagues,
I hope you are all doing well.
And please contact me directly if this feels like an overreach.
In addition to the Dept of Ed, DEI, Parks, etc., the cuts have also
targeted Columbia University specifically.
Many congresspeople have no idea which departments and what research is
being cut. The impact on the field of Deaf Ed will be quite severe.
These letters can be sent to US Senators and Representatives.
If you are interested and do not have the info at hand - here are links for
contacting your folks in DC.
https://www.senate.gov/senators/senators-contact.htm
https://www.house.gov/representatives/find-your-representative
This template was shared with me as a response to cutting funding for the
Deaf Education Teacher Prep program at Columbia University. It has a short
letter - and a lot more info afterwards, plus contact info for professors
in the dept. if you are interested in learning more.
Thanks for considering making a statement,
Stephanie
----
Dear NAME,
I am [YOUR NAME AND RELATIONSHIP TO THE ISSUE AS PARENT, TEACHER, etc.]. I
am very concerned about the impact of the loss of tuition funding to
Teachers College of Columbia University’s Deaf Education Teacher
preparation program. On March 7th, the Trump administration ordered a $400M
cut of federal funds to Columbia University. Among the programs that were
terminated are critical teacher’s education tuition support programs called
COlumbia COllaborate and the COACH Project. The funds that were eliminated
are part of a five-year contract to support students in the program who
show both promise and financial need. The cut to this program will severely
undermine the education that deaf children in New York and around the
country are able to receive from Teachers College graduates.
Deaf Education in the United States is facing a critical shortage of
qualified teachers. In NYC alone there are 4000 deaf and hard-of-hearing
students who are served throughout NYC public schools in various settings.
Graduates of Teachers College of Columbia University can be found in every
placement that serves DHH students. Moreover, the majority of teachers of
the deaf in the NYC area are graduates of Teachers College. This funding
cut will eliminate 45 new teachers of the deaf from serving in a field that
is already in shortage.
I am writing to ask you to work with Congress and the President’s
administration to reinstate the program funding for the COlumbia
COllaborate and COACH Program at Teachers College of Columbia University.
Deaf children’s futures are at stake.
Thank you,
NAME
___________________________________________________________________
Information below from Maria Hartman
Impact of Grant Funding on TC’s Preparation of Teachers of the Deaf
● Deafness is a neurological emergency – without support, deaf and hard of
hearing children do not learn to communicate, which has cascading effects
on brain, language, academic, social, and occupational development. Deaf
and hard of hearing (DHH) children and their families need specialized
support from teachers of the deaf (TODs) to learn to communicate, read,
write, and thrive in their communities.
● However, deaf education is a critical shortage area, both nationally and
in New York City, with far fewer TODs in the field than are required to
meet the needs of DHH infants, toddlers, and youth.
● Since its founding in 1906 as one of the nation’s first training
programs for TODs, the Program in Deaf and Hard of Hearing Education at
Teachers College (TC-DHH) has been preparing educators and leaders to
address these inequities in DHH education.
● Over 4000 DHH children are served by the NYC Public Schools, with
another approximately 700 students enrolled in six New York state-supported
schools for the deaf. Graduates of TC-DHH can be found in every placement
that serves DHH children, from the Bronx to Staten Island, from mainstream
schools to self-contained classrooms, from cochlear implant clinics to
early intervention agencies. In fact, the majority of TODs employed by the
NYC Public Schools are TC-DHH alumni.
● Potential TODs, particularly those from the New York City area, face
financial barriers to completing teacher preparation programs, including
TC-DHH. Since 2018, TC-DHH has been awarded $2.5 million in grants from the
federal Education Department’s Office of Special Education Programs to fund
scholarships, stipends, and other direct aid for scholars in DHH education.
● As a result of this federal funding, called COlumbia COllaborate and the
COACH Project, 45 new TODs and speech-language pathologists who would not
otherwise have been able to access high-quality preparation in DHH
education have entered the field, allowing hundreds of DHH students to
learn the language, literacy, and social skills they need to succeed.
● TC-DHH has a strong history of graduating students from the local
community who now serve DHH children and families here in New York City. We
have many human-interest stories, including that of an upcoming 2025
graduate!
Please contact Drs. Maria Hartman (mc...@tc.columbia.edu) and Elaine Smolen
(es3...@tc.columbia.edu).
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