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 POTENTIAL STUDENTS 

CHKC is accepting applications from individuals interested in gaining skills in independent living.

If you are interested,
please contact us at
(416) 225-8989
or   e-mail   us
  
  
 

 
 
 

 

 
 

 

Learn 2 Hand
Manual
ONLINE
 
 
 
 


 



DONATE to CHKC
ONLINE




Welcome to CHKC

The Canadian Helen Keller Centre (CHKC) is the only residential training centre in Canada for people who have become Deaf-Blind. Our services help people develop alternate ways to care for oneself, one's family and one's home, plus we facilitate connections to peers and the community through the development of alternative forms of communication, computing and through self-advocacy and peer support.
 
CHKC provides training in skills of daily living and advocacy. CHKC also works to raise awareness and advocates with the Deaf-Blind Community for increased services.
 
There are at least 15,500 Canadians who are Deaf-Blind. The organizations serving people who are Deaf-Blind only know of a few Deaf-Blind people – therefore part of CHKC’s work is finding people currently living in isolation.
 
CHKC is without permanent funding and relies on fundraising and volunteers. If you'd like to make a donation online, please click here or call CHKC at (416) 225-8989. We also rely on organizations working in the field of Deaf-Blindness, for their expertise and other gifts in kind. Thank you to everyone who helps CHKC.
 


 

JuneFest Update!

JuneFest 2008

Wednesday, June 18th, 2008
12pm-6pm
@ Mel Lastman Square

JuneFest is an annual awareness festival held by the Canadian Helen Keller Centre and Rotary Cheshire Homes – 2 agencies supporting the Deaf-Blind Community. June is Deaf-Blind Awareness Month in the Province of Ontario because June is the month of Helen Keller’s birthday. Helen Keller was a famous Deaf-Blind American who led the way in advocating for access and services.

People who come to JuneFest are diverse and from all over southern Ontario. They include consumers of services and their families, service providers, consumer organizations, students, corporations and the general public. Nowhere else can you see so many communication methods in one place – people using Intervenors (sighted guides/interpreters), the 2-Hand Manual alphabet, American Sign Language, voice over, large print notes, hearing aids, cochlear implants and even blackberries, all proof that the challenge of Deaf-Blindness can be offset when services and technologies are made available so people can be more independent. People who come to JuneFest learn about vision and/or hearing loss and services that help as well as some issues that prevent people from accessing what many others take for granted - the environment, people, community resources and employment.

This year’s JuneFest event was the most successful JuneFest ever with more than 2,000 people in attendance. Please visit www.junefest.ca to read about JuneFest 2008 and to view photos of the fun! Thank you to everyone who organizes and supports JuneFest, the Canadian Helen Keller Centre, Rotary Cheshire Homes and the Deaf-Blind Community.

 


 

Microsoft Canada Receives Award

Earlier this year, the Canadian Helen Keller Centre recognized Microsoft Canada for their outstanding contribution in support of people who are disabled with our 2008 Canadian Helen Keller Centre Award. Microsoft is a leader in designing accessible computer technology and in funding programs that enable people with disabilities to access computers and information. Computer technology has become essential in the lives of people with disabilities. Specific to people with combined vision and hearing loss, it reduces the extreme isolation often experienced as it provides easy and unlimited access to people and information.

Microsoft Canada received the Annual Canadian Helen Keller Centre Award at a special tribute luncheon held on Monday, April 28, 2008 at the Fairmont Royal York Hotel in Toronto. Not only does this event recognize the work of dedicated individuals and organizations who are making a difference in the lives of people who are disabled, it is a key fundraising event for CHKC’s many programs that help people who are Deaf-Blind. For information on next year’s event, please email CHKC.

 


 

Intervenors & Intervenor Services
  
At the heart of everything we do is Intervenor Services.
Intervenors provide access by working as interpreters and sighted guides to assist people who have become Deaf-Blind with connecting to their communities. Intervenors help people who have become Deaf-Blind to regain, maintain and increase their independence. They help to reduce the isolation of living without sufficient sight or sound.
 
The different types of Intervenor Services or related supports available include:

  • Assessment and Referrals for people who have become Deaf-Blind
  • Emergency Intervenor Services
  • Employer-Provided Intervenor Services (supporting communication in meetings and other situations)
  • Friendly Visiting, Volunteer Intervenors
  • Housing that includes Intervenor Services
  • Learning how to use an Intervenor and Understanding the Role of the Intervenor
  • Outreach Intervenors Services (for consumers)
  • Professional Organizations of Intervenors
  • Public Access Intervenor Services (to make weddings and other social events accessible)
  • Training to become an Intervenor (in-house and academic)
  • Workplace awareness training in basic American Sign Language, 2-Hand Manual, Deaf-Blind culture and accessibility issues

If you are interested in learning more about Intervenors, Intervenor Services, or Deaf-Blindness, please contact deafblindinfo@onramp.ca. You can also browse our website for more information.
 




Workshops for Advocacy and Community Building

 Table Discussion

Signed Facilitation

In 2007, CHKC began a new program – Workshops for Advocacy & Community Building – to provide training in a group format to members of the Deaf-Blind Community and employment opportunities to Deaf-Blind facilitators. Deaf-Blind facilitators are invited to apply for various positions; successful applicants are given the support they need to develop and deliver each workshop. Through the workshop development process, facilitators develop skills to work effectively in a team, online and in person, and they expand their ability to provide individualized access to CHKC's diverse consumer base. Deaf-Blind registrants learn about various topics, they get a chance to help each other and be part of a community, an experience that is seldom experienced by many people who are Deaf-Blind.

CHKC workshops are made accessible using interpreters and intervenors. As well, workshop material is sent to each registrant prior to the workshop so learners can pre-read materials and be ready for the group learning that takes place. For those registrants who want more information on the topic, CHKC converts workshops into courses that are provided one-on-one in our facility.

So far 6 workshops have been held: Community Services, how to use them; Team Building to tackle mutual problems; Deaf-Blind Culture, Internet/Online Safety; Self Advocating in the Community; and How the Eye Works/Sight Loss. The next workshop, scheduled for September 2008, is called Using Your Intervenor – the Workshop. To register for this upcoming workshop, please contact deafblindinfo@onramp.ca

.


 

Seniors Support Services - CHKC's New Service for Seniors

There are an estimated 50,000 seniors living with combined vision and hearing loss in Canada. Thousands go undiagnosed and therefore do not get the support they need to live as safely, independently and happily as possible at home or in supported environments. Of the individuals diagnosed, quality of life may still be diminished because of society's reaction to aging.

CHKC's new service provides support directly to seniors with vision and hearing loss, and workshops to people working with seniors. Through these services, we increase awareness about Deaf-Blindness; teach coping skills; develop an understanding of various eye and ear conditions; improve communication and make environments and activities more accessible.

To learn more, please click on the following link to download our pamphlet:

CHKC’s Seniors Support Services are funded by the Ministry of Community and Social Services .
 


 

Become a member of CHKC and help determine our future

Members of Db Community at RCH AGMCHKC implemented a paid membership in order to provide our community with an opportunity to help plan CHKC's future.
 
CHKC also needs to expand its network in order to grow and gain support needed to create a strong impact for advocacy, for fund and awareness raising and to recruit more volunteers.

Please consider becoming a member. The application form can be downloaded here. Membership runs from April 1 to March 31. Membership starts at $15.00.
 
For more information on membership, please email CHKC or use one of the contact numbers at the foot of this page (TTY, Voice, Fax).
 


 

Read the Latest Issue of "Bridging Hands" Newsletter Online

CHKC's newsletter, Bridging Hands, Volume 15 is available online. It is full of information on events, services and CHKC updates. Past issues of Bridging Hands are available online as well.
 

 To become a subscriber
, please contact CHKC.
 
 Return to the top.

 

all donations to CHKC are tax deductible

The Canadian Helen Keller Centre is the first skills training centre in Canada where individuals who are Deaf-Blind can upgrade or gain independent living and technical skills.

Through our web site, our goal is to inform persons who are deaf-blind, their families, service providers, volunteers, supporters, and the general public about the needs, concerns and challenges of persons living with both vision and hearing loss.


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The Canadian Helen Keller Centre, Inc.
210 Empress Avenue
Toronto, ON
M2N 3T9

 TEL/TTY: (416) 225-8989
FAX: (416) 225-4871
e-mail


Registered Charity #86423 9082 RR0001

 


This page was last modified on July 12, 2007.


 
© 2000-2007 Canadian Helen Keller Centre