A young black woman, Jenelle Rouse, made history by becoming the first deaf person to receive a PhD in Canada. She earned a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Western Ontario.
Her academic path commenced upon graduating from York University’s Deaf and Hard Hearing Teacher Education Programme in Canada.
After graduating from the University of Western Ontario in 2016 with a Master of Arts in Applied Linguistics in Education, Jenelle went on to receive her Ph.D. in 2020.
After earning her bachelor’s degree, she spent more than ten years continuing her studies in Canada while working as a schoolteacher. She instructs students of all grades in the American Sign Language Curriculum and Ontario subject-related classes.
Another deaf dancer who uses her body to tell tales is Jennele. In 2015, she participated in several independent live performances in addition to a short dance video called Perceptions.
She has also worked in a variety of art-related fields in Ontario as a consultant, artist, facilitator, co-researcher, and small-business owner of Multi-Lens.
Every deaf child should have sign language as their foundation, according to Jennele, who also noted that her research transformatively focuses on accessibility to tools that identify and support sign language learning in early deaf children.
Another tale concerns Amie Fornah Sankoh, a bright African woman who became the first deaf graduate of the University of Tennessee (UT), Knoxville, in the United States.
Amie was deaf at three due to a civil conflict in her native Sierra Leone. She had no hearing loss at birth.