Parent Stories
When we walked into St. Joe’s, we knew we had found our new home. I’ll never forget what they said to us. I sat down at the table, and they said, “We will figure out how she learns, and that is how we will teach her.”
She looked at her – not her file – talked and played with her and actually listened to what we were saying. We were thrilled – somebody was going to give her a fighting chance.
Not long after our meeting, a colleague of my mom’s, Jill Nowak, who had previously worked for St. Joe’s, told my mom that Lars would not miss a step developmentally because of his hearing disability and that St. Joe’s would see to it. She was right.
Auston will be able to attend any school he wants, participate in anything he wants because of the early intervention of the programs of St. Joseph Institute for the Deaf.
When the weight was too much to bear on our own St. Joseph’s Institute for the Deaf came alongside us and gave us a gift of their own by helping us carry what felt like an impossibly heavy burden.
At only a “listening age” of not even two years old, our daughter, who entered St. Joseph with no spoken language, now sings “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star” and she tells us the Goldilocks and the Three Bears story.