Oregon School for the Deaf

Oregon School for the Deaf

Main Building and School Building, 1912
Address
999 Locust St NE
Salem, Oregon, Marion County 97301
United States
Coordinates 44°57′56″N 123°01′14″W / 44.965556°N 123.020556°W / 44.965556; -123.020556Coordinates: 44°57′56″N 123°01′14″W / 44.965556°N 123.020556°W / 44.965556; -123.020556[1]
Information
Type Public
Superintendent Dr. Sharla Jones, effective July 2013
Principal Matthew Boyd[2]
Number of students 63[3]
Color(s) Purple and gold         [2]
Athletics conference OSAA Casco League 1A-2[2]
Mascot Panthers[2]
Accreditation NAAS[3]
Website www.osd.k12.or.us


Entrance to the school

Oregon School for the Deaf (OSD), is a public school in Salem, Oregon, United States that serves deaf and hard of hearing students from kindergarten through high school and up to 18 years of age.

History

Established in November 1870 by the Oregon Legislative Assembly as the Deaf and Mute Institute to provide free public education to deaf children,[4] it is one of the oldest continuously operating schools in Oregon.[5] It is operated by the Oregon Department of Education, and has been accredited by Northwest Association of Accredited Schools since 2004[3] and also by the Conference of Educational Administrators of Schools and Programs for the Deaf.

Academics

There is a program to teach living skills for students who have modified diplomas or certificates called ESP. OSD has honors, AP and career courses. It serves students who are deaf or heard of hearing in their Community Based Instruction program.

As of the 2004-05 academic year, the total full-time enrollment of the school, exclusive of cooperative programs with local school districts, was between 125 and 135.

In 2005, by order of the state legislature included in its annual appropriation for the school, study was begun on the potential benefit of moving the Oregon School for the Blind to the OSD campus.[6] Oregon Superintendent of Public Instruction Susan Castillo has rejected a proposal for services now provided by the school to be provided instead through contracts with other public or private institutions.[7]

Buildings in named in honor of staff and alumni

The Main Building and School Building were razed in December 1975 without authorization from the State Legislature.

Extreme Makover:Home Edition

Episode 172 In this special Halloween episode, Ty and the gang help renovate the school's Nightmare Factory, which is a haunted house in which the proceeds are used to keep the school afloat. Instead of Ty shouting with his bullhorn to surprise the school, he sends a small plane with a visual message while the staff and students are having their annual barbecue. While the students are in Minnesota getting new hearing aids, the team builds a new dormitory for the boys as their old dorms along with the Nightmare Factory was considered unsafe to live in. Guest stars include actress Marlee Matlin and Rob Zombie.

Since then, the new dormitory has been rarely utilized due to budget constrictions.

Nightmare Factory

Nightmare Factory Salem The haunted house was founded in 1987.

See also

References

  1. U.S. Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System: Oregon School for the Deaf
  2. 1 2 3 4 http://www.osaa.org/schools.aspx/OregonSchoolForTheDeaf/
  3. 1 2 3 http://www.northwestaccreditation.org/schools/Oregon.pdf[]
  4. Gannon, Jack. 1981. Deaf Heritage–A Narrative History of Deaf America, Silver Spring, MD: National Association of the Deaf, p. 41 (PDF)
  5. McHatton, Patty. 2004. Long Creek resident to graduate from Oregon School for the Deaf. Blue Mountain Eagle (John Day, Oregon), March 31, 2004, Education section.
  6. Hays, Kevin (June 10, 2006). "State Seeks Comment on Combining Salem-Based Schools for Deaf, Blind". Salem-News.com. Salem, Oregon: Salem-News.com. Retrieved 2006-12-19.
  7. "ODE will Continue to Operate the Oregon School for the Blind and Oregon School for the Deaf" (Press release). Salem, Oregon: Oregon Department of Education. October 27, 2006. Retrieved 2006-12-19.
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