I was assigned to hometeach a sister in our ward who was deaf. No one in the ward knows sign language, so I've been using some technology to chat. They didn't have Internet, or a wireless router, so I had to think of another solution. Here is what I'm doing. If anyone has ideas to make it better I'm open.
I installed openfire on my MacBook Pro (http://www.igniterealtime.org/projects/ ... /index.jsp). After you install then open up the browser and log on to http://localhost:9090. I created two users (with really simple passwords) - one for me and one for my hometeachee, then I created a chat room called "hometeaching." It was not too difficult to set up.
My other laptop runs Windows XP. I installed Pidgin (http://www.pidgin.im/). I used iChat on my Mac.
Then I used the Mac Airport (the program for the wireless card) to create a network. I guess this means I broadcast a signal. I set the other computer to connect to my Mac as a peer-to-peer connection. Once the connection is made then I just join the chat room hometeaching that I set up with openfire.
This way I can just bring two laptops and we can have a chat conversation. I usually download the Ensign to a USB drive (I would preload it to the computers, but I never have enough time.) I can then ask her to read various section and then ask questions. She has really began to think about the Gospel. She is beginning to pray again and even read her scriptures, and she is planning on coming to church next Sunday (under the condition that I bring my computers and someone types notes).
Let me know if anyone has any ideas to improve, or other cool variations.
Hometeaching a deaf member with peer-to-peer chat
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If it was me, I'd probably use one laptop opened to a word processing app and take turns.
As for alternatives, I guess it all depends on the skill of the person involved. If she can lipread, then all you'd need is one laptop so she can type her "speech".
Long term, I'd suggest learning some ASL - at least enough to finger spell. You might also review the resources available here
As for alternatives, I guess it all depends on the skill of the person involved. If she can lipread, then all you'd need is one laptop so she can type her "speech".
Long term, I'd suggest learning some ASL - at least enough to finger spell. You might also review the resources available here
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I'd certainly ask around what local resources there are. If there's a deaf group in another ward, it can probably be arranged for her to attend that ward/branch.
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