Abstract:
School inclusion will be an improvement of the school with legal determination and as
presented by the student on agreement, being responsible for specification according
to the need to assist in the work developed in their school process. This monograph
aims to understand the role of the teacher and the interpreter in the inclusion of the
deaf student; to know the main difficulties faced by the regular education teacher with
the deaf; to investigate the different methodologies of work carried out with students
with deafness.The theoretical references that will give clues to the theme will be built
based on the readings of (GOLDFELD, M 1997), (MANTOAN, M.T 2003),
STAINBACK, S: STAINBACK, W(1999). The readings of the works of these authors
allowed the perception of an analysis bias that seeks to highlight the inclusion of
people with disabilities in society, citizens of rights, belonging to regular education by
right. The methodology used in this monograph consists of bibliographical research
from recent years. Based on the studies studied, we will present how the authors
have observed the methodological proposals for teaching the deaf person. Thus, we
will base ourselves on how teachers and interpreters work with deaf students in
regular education. We conclude that the school's challenge is to make the education
offered for all universal and of quality. Respect the individual and learn from each
other. When the deaf is in evidence, it is necessary to consider the importance of
bilingualism, with sign language as the first language and language of instruction
without disregarding the country's language in its written modality. For us to aim for
this, everyone involved with the school has to commit. The challenge is not just to
welcome and integrate but to learn from the subjects where dialogue is essential in
the process.