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Texas Playground Sign Teaches Kids Sign Language
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Texas Playground Sign Teaches Kids Sign Language

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Ward Elementary in Abilene installed a playground sign teaching sign language to help hearing and deaf students play together. The sign honors Caleb Jr., a beloved deaf student who passed away. Kids can now communicate directly without needing an interpreter. Our community grows stronger when we learn together and share knowledge across neighborhoods.

Ward Elementary in Abilene, Texas now has something special on our playground. A new sign teaches kids how to use American Sign Language while they play together.

The sign honors Caleb Devereaux Jr., who we called "Junior." He was 11 years old and deaf. Junior loved dancing, singing, and making videos with his sisters. He passed away from leukemia almost two years ago. His teacher, Letabeth Machogu, says Junior taught her how to be friendly to everyone and see students as whole people.

Our new playground sign shows the ASL alphabet and signs for words like "friend," "play," "tag," and "share." Before this sign, hearing kids needed an interpreter to talk with deaf classmates. Now they can communicate directly and build real friendships without a third person helping.

Machogu teaches deaf and hard of hearing students at Ward Elementary. She says Junior was one of her favorite students. When she came back to school after he passed away, she felt angry because he should still be there with us.

The sign has "In loving memory of Caleb Jr." written at the top. Machogu thinks Junior would be proud and would say "Thank you, I love it." Kids across our community can learn that everyone should know some sign language. We can all help bridge the gap between deaf and hearing worlds.

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