I am a Deaf educator who was raised in a hearing household where literacy played a central role in communication, learning, and independence. Growing up, I was exposed to a range of communication approaches, including aural-verbal and total communication, which shaped my understanding of how language access impacts literacy development.
These experiences taught me that no single approach works for every learner—and that when a strategy is not effective, it is not a failure, but an opportunity to adjust, reflect, and find a better path forward to support student success.
This perspective, combined with my professional background in Deaf Education and Elementary Education, has influenced my belief in the importance of accessible, visual, and structured literacy instruction—especially for Deaf, hard of hearing, and early language learners.
Through my work with ASL learners, Deaf education tutoring, and early literacy development, I have seen how powerful clear and consistent instruction can be in supporting both language acquisition and reading comprehension.
Through Hands & Words Learning, I create resources designed to support teachers with ASL-friendly strategies, visual supports, sight word practice, phonics instruction, and early reading skills that make literacy more accessible for all learners.