
1 minute read
All the signs point to teaching
while knowing she teaches sign language and I was involved in this hiring process,” she said.
The rest is history. After meeting, Hall hired Durand.
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“I was so impressed with her energy and her perspective. Just watching her work is amazing,” sometimes,” Brasuell said.
Hall said.
ASL student Joshua Kuehl enjoys learning from Durand.
“I am growing in my knowledge of both the culture and the language everyday with this program by having awesome professors such as Stephanie Durand. Her personality allows me to feel more included in the classroom environment, and I feel like she brings a lot of cultural knowledge into the class,” Kuehl said.
Jennifer Brasuell is a student who takes ASL 2, and audits ASL 1. She thinks Durand is great at catering to student needs.
“She does very well at either slowing down for the one; she’s a little faster in the two. It just depends on the level. She is very good at explaining the signs, not just the word but the meaning behind it since it’s very contextual,” Brasuell said.
Though Durand is the instructor, educating teaches her something new all the time.
“The students teach me about life, and their own individual experiences, their cultures, their community. I’m almost amazed at how much I learn. Everyday there’s one of those moments where I go oh, I didn’t know that. I really like that. The biggest impact is the students. They mean a lot to me,” Durand said.
Another person who has impacted Durand is her grandmother.
She passed when she was two, but provides a source of influence for anything Durand faces in life.
“My family always says that I’m just like her. And when things come up I persevere, and she always persevered. So whenever something comes up I think of my grandma and I can get through it,” Durand said.
[From ASL, pg. 1]
According to Kristine Hall, ASL program director, throughout the country most people who are hired to teach interpreting are hearing.
“She’s deaf teaching interpreting. That’s really a big difference, and an added bonus compared to the other programs,” Hall said.
Prior to working at Pierce, Durand taught for three years at Gallaudet University in Washington D.C. She is a former student as well as educator from Gaulladet. She became “enthralled” with the ASL linguistics classes and earned her Masters in Sign Language Education from the university. It is the one and only deaf university in the world.
Durand taught ASL, deaf culture, deaf studies, as well as interpreting during her time there.
When Hall heard about Durand, she knew what value Durand