How to Support Deaf Awareness Week in the Workplace
There are no particular rules for how a workplace should support Deaf Awareness Week. But there are some key points to keep in mind. Some of these may inspire you to plan appropriate and relevant activities.
Review and Increase Your Accessibility
Any activities around Deaf Awareness Week will be more effective if they’re meaningful. For instance, it’s a legal requirement to make Reasonable Adjustments for any staff with a registered disability. So, if anyone in your organisation confirms they have hearing loss or is deaf then you must make appropriate alterations to suit them. One of those can be adding captions to Zoom meetings and in-person meetings. And since over 80% of organisations now add captions to Zoom meetings, this is easy to do.
Another thing to consider for accessibility is a review of your online content. All web content should follow WCAG formats such as headers and paragraph tags in the right places, for example. Also, consider how visual aids could help your staff such as alarms,
Train Staff on Appropriate Communication
Many staff will be unaware of what they could or should do to support colleagues who may be deaf or have hearing loss. But offering them the chance to learn British Sign Language (BSL) could be game-changing.
Doing so benefits both sides. For instance, staff who are deaf or have hearing loss increase their accessibility while hearing staff get the opportunity to develop valuable skills they can use in future work environments or their personal lives. Alongside BSL training, when staff receive deaf awareness training they get a deeper understanding of the barriers deaf people face. After receiving training, they feel more confident in communicating with deaf customers and clients.
Run Inclusive Initiatives
A strong sense of employee inclusion leads to an 8X higher likelihood of achieving better business outcomes. And there are approaches you can take to foster better inclusion. These include appointing inclusion champions, setting up Employee Resource Groups (ERG), and supporting leadership in making change.
Providing regular feedback, embedding inclusion into policies, and fixing job ads to welcome deaf candidates can all be powerful. Joining the government’s Disability Confident Scheme is also a very powerful way to showcase your commitment.
Host Relevant Events
Hosting events may not be as difficult or convoluted as you imagine. It could be as simple as launching an instructional guide, creating a video for internal training, or arranging drop-in deafness awareness sessions in person.
In such sessions, guides or instructors could help staff understand more about deaf culture and what they could do to support and acknowledge deaf people. It’s all about making meaningful changes and encouraging better acceptance:
- What you say: Being respectful and avoiding any condescension is an important way to respect deaf people. There can be many pitfalls to saying the wrong things and a drop-in session could help keep everyone on track.
- How you say it: Many deaf people rely on lip-reading to understand others. Knowing this can help staff speak to deaf people face-on, maintaining eye contact, and with enough light for deaf people to see.
- Where you say it: Some people with hearing loss use different tactics to overcome their problems, like lip-reading. But if there’s also a lot of background noise, this can prevent them from understanding others. Finding a quiet space to talk can help.