The Institute for the Advancement of Deaf Persons in Israel

The Institute for the Advancement of Deaf Persons in Israel (Hebrew: המכון לקידום החרש בישראל, Arabic: معهد النهوض بالصم في اسرائيل) was founded in 1993 to provide services and programming to the Israeli deaf community. This includes employment assistance,[1] creation of an electronic Israeli Sign Language dictionary, and organization of a national Deaf Day in 2009 to increase public awareness about the Israeli deaf community and Israeli Sign Language.[2]

The Institute for the Advancement of Deaf Persons in Israel
Formation1993
Legal statusnon-profit
Purposeinitiate, develop and implement programs for the empowerment & independence of the Israeli deaf and hard-of-hearing community
Location
Websitehttp://www.dpii.org/ (in English)

The Institute is also the coordinator for government-provided interpreting services to deaf Israelis,[3] including providing ISL interpreters, note takers, technology lending, and other support services for deaf university students.[4] These services are handled through the Institute's Sela Center. The Institute also organizes an annual Student Day (יום הסטודנטים) for deaf and hard-of-hearing university students throughout Israel.[5] In addition, the Institute also works with Arab-Israeli deaf communities in Israel, providing Arabic-language materials and professional training to deaf Arab-Israelis and the professionals who work with them,[6] as well as works in conjunction with deaf communities outside of Israel.[7]

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.