Middle-east Arab News Opinion | Asharq Al-awsat

Palestinians Teach Blind Students English via Music | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
Select Page
Media ID: 55348088
Caption:

Palestinians Teach Blind Students English via Music


Palestinians Teach Blind Students English via Music

Palestinians Teach Blind Students English via Music

Blind and visually impaired Palestinian students at an elementary school for the blind in the West Bank are learning English through song.

Youngsters are welcoming this approach as it breaks the tedious routine of the usual Braille textbooks and memorizing the rules of grammar.

“In specific subjects, I like to motivate them (to learn) so I teach them grammar or vocabulary by creating a song, because they feel better and they keep repeating it,” said Hind Al-Tamimi.

“We are dealing with students with special needs, they are blind or visually impaired, so we urge them to depend on their hearing sense more than their sense of touch that they use in Braille.”

Even though students have been delighted with the new curriculum, some parents in the religiously conservative town of Hebron are alarmed by the fact that the use of music in the classroom is not in harmony with Islamic tradition.

Rashid Rashid, English-language studies supervisor at the Palestinian Ministry of Education, said he has been assuring families that music can be a positive learning tool in this case.

“The people think that the musical methods and singing may lead to dancing, so they may not accept it,” he said. “Before we adopted this method at all of the schools, we chose 25 schools and made it clear to the headmasters that the musical method is not taboo and not shameful.”

According to recent scientific studies, musical sounds have the ability of enhancing neuroplasiticity, or the brain’s ability to adapt and change as a result of training and experience, making learning easier.