The largest populations of deaf individuals in the US are typically found in urban areas with established deaf communities and resources, such as Washington, D.C., New York City, and Los Angeles. Additionally, states with historically prominent deaf schools, like Maryland and California, also tend to have higher concentrations of deaf residents.
Answeri only know Maryland, New York, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Alabama, Missouri, Mississippi, California, New Mexico, Arizona, Texas, Oklahoma, Wisconsin, Minnesota
According to estimates, there are approximately 26.9 million Americans who are deaf or hard of hearing, and around 1.3 million Americans who are blind.
Deaf people communicate by sign language and all can lip read; some deaf people can talk or can't depending on the diagnosis from their doctor (these individuals would be classified as deaf and mute (can't speak.)
Deaf people are most concentrated in metropolitan areas with established deaf communities, such as Washington D.C., New York City, and Los Angeles. These cities typically have greater access to deaf services, schools, and social opportunities.
schools in china tend to have more chinese people than us schools
956 charter schools
just about 70 schools in the us
I'm not deaf but I am an asl student who has done research on CI in class and the options of deaf people. I have discovered that deaf people don't hate CIs necessarily but feel they strip people of who they are. They believe they aren't in the hearing or deaf world and struggle with who they are. A common arguement: "deaf people aren't broken, why try to fix us."
There are countless defunct elementary schools all over the US.
There are approximately 130,000 K-12 schools in the United States, including public and private schools.
not many