Project Insight
Project Insight (P.I.) is a division of the San Francisco Recreation & Parks Department which provides recreational and learning activities for hearing-impaired and vision-impaired children, teenagers, young adults.
Founded circa 1990, Project Insight is based at Wawona Clubhouse[1] in the Sigmund Stern Recreation Grove, two miles south of San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. Participants, staff and volunteers use American Sign Language.
Purpose and activities
Because deaf and hard of hearing youth are often isolated from their hearing peer group and excluded from recreational and group social experiences, Project Insight:
- Strives to integrate young people with disabilities into the general community,[1][2] while supporting their individuality, independence, dignity, and cultural diversity
- Promotes learning and development, focusing on self-expression, teamwork, education and building cognitive, social and motor skills
- Provides a variety of recreation, outdoor adventure and cultural activities, including:
- After school homework clubs, arts and crafts, cultural events, parties, etc.
- Golf[2]
- Hiking (Yosemite National Park is a favourite destination)
- Rock climbing
- Skiing
- Taiko drumming[3][4]
- White water Rafting
gollark: On my (GNU/)Linux computing devices, which is all of my non-portable ones, I run dnscrypt-proxy, which acts as a local DNS server which runs my queries through DNS over HTTPS/DNS over TLS/DNSCrypt servers.
gollark: In other news, the first rule of tautology club is the first rule of tautology club.
gollark: Yes, Google is definitionally Google.
gollark: I mean, you can... not use Google.
gollark: No.
See also
- Dorothy Miles Cultural Centre
- Youth Leadership Camp
References
- "Project Insight website". (includes photo albums from skiing, rock climbing and white water rafting trips). Archived from the original on 2006-10-10. Retrieved 2006-11-03. External link in
|publisher=
(help) - "Sense of stroke". Gilroy Dispatch. 29 October 2003.
- Nanette Asimov (16 September 2006). "Robinson Wadsworth — musician, adventurer". San Francisco Chronicle.
Taiko drumming — thunderous and thrilling — was tailor-made for his kids at Project Insight, decided Mr. Wadsworth, who kept a set of drums at the Recreation and Park Department. The drums were so loud that many youngsters could hear their sounds, [P.I. Director] Metcalf-Tobin said. Even those who were profoundly deaf could feel the drum's vibrations. "They'd just go wild on it," he said.
- "Taiko Drumming at NTID". Sponsored by Rochester Institute of Technology National Technical Institute for the Deaf and PEN-International with support from San Francisco Taiko Dojo, Grand Master Seiichi Tanaka and Project Insight staff member Artist in residence (photo gallery). Three week program, February 1–21, 2004. Check date values in:
|date=
(help); External link in|publisher=
(help)
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.