BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS

Myspace Clocks, Flowers Clocks at WishAFriend.com
Photo Flipbook Slideshow Maker

Ahad, 19 Julai 2009

Jom Belajar Sign Language





click link below to learn more....Good Luck..



































Sabtu, 18 Julai 2009

LAWAK PEKAK



Satu hari, seorang lelaki menemui doktor dan menyatakan kebimbangannya terhadap tahap pendengaran isterinya...dia bimbang isterinya akan jadi pekak...jadi doktor tu pun suruh dia pulang dan test pendengaran isterinya sekali lagi...
Jadi,suatu hari semasa isterinya sedang memasak, dia pun tegur isterinya dari belakang...
"Sayang...masak apa hari ni?"...isterinya tidak menjawab...diam je....Lepas tu, dia pegi dekat sikit kat isteri dia dan dia tanya sekali lagi...
"Sayang masak apa hari ni?"...dengan nada suara yang agak kuat sedikit..isterinya masih tak menjawab...
lalu dia pun mula pergi berdiri betul-betul belakang isteri dia lalu bertanya dengan nada suara yang kuat...
"SAYANG MASAK APA HARI NI!!!!!!!?"...
Kemudian, isteri dia pun berpaling lalu menjawab dengan nada selamba,
"Abang ni...kan dah tiga kali saya cakap, hari ni saya masak sambal tumis udang..."
Hehehe....Ulasannya....Siapa yang pekak?...

Rabu, 15 Julai 2009

Lagenda Pekak









Photo © Library of Congress
One of the most inspiring deaf or deafblind women is Helen Keller. Even today, her story fascinates people.

Helen Keller's Early Childhood


Helen Keller was born June 27, 1880 in Tuscumbia, Alabama. An unidentified illness took her hearing and sight when she was only 19 months old. After losing both, she became wild and uncontrollable due to her inability to communicate and learn.
Anne Sullivan Comes Into Helen's Life
Almost as well known as Helen Keller is the work of Anne Sullivan, who became her teacher in 1887, working in a role that today is known as an intervenor. Helen finally learned that things have names when Sullivan had the famous "water" breakthrough, fingerspelling "water" into Helen's hand and pumping water for Helen to feel.

Helen Keller's Further Progress


After that breakthrough, there was no stopping Helen Keller. She went on to attend a school for the blind and other schools, learned how to talk, learned how to lipread with her fingers, and graduated from Radcliffe College.

Helen Keller's Adulthood


Helen Keller never lived independently (unlike today where many deafblind people live independently). She always lived with either Anne Sullivan (and for a few years, Anne Sullivan's husband too), or Polly Thompson who joined the household in the 1930s and stayed on after Sullivan passed away in 1936. Among the many things that Helen Keller was famous for saying was her statement that deafness was a "greater affliction" than blindness. Helen Keller passed away on June 1, 1968.