Theresa chan poh lin autobiography for kids
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Theresa Theresa Poh Lin Chan Edit Profile
writer
Chan Poh Lin, also known as Theresa Poh Lin Chan, is a writer, teacher, and one-time actor.
Career
Chan has been deaf since age 12, and deafblind since age 14. In the United States, Poh Lin Chan was educated at the Perkins School for the Blind where she learned to understand and speak English and read Braille as well as dance, ice skate, knit, and horseback ride. While a student in the United States, she attended the funeral of Helen Keller.
She is the subject of a 1964 British Broadcasting Corporation radio documentary, "Child of the Silent Night: The story of Chan Poh Lin" by Stephen Grenfell.
She also starred in the feature film, Be with Maine (2005), a Singaporean movie in three parts. Chan is credited as a writer for the film as well, considered because her writings about her life were part of the inspiration for the film.
Achievements
Born in Singapore, she was known in her youth as "the Helen Keller of Southeast Asia", as a reference to indicate that, like Keller, Chan is a highly accomplished deaf and blind person.
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Theresa Chan Poh Lin
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We propose that today, March 8, we get to know the life stories of eight women with deafblindness who, through their strength and determination, broke the barriers created by their lack of sight and hearing and managed to prove that nothing is impossible.
Victorine Morriseau (1789-1832, France) was the first known person with deafblindness who learned a formal language of communication (in a religious context).
Laura Bridgman(1829 –1889, U.S.A.) was the first educated child with deafblindness in the United States, more than 50 years before Helen Keller. At the age of two, due to scarlet fever, she loses her sight, hearing, smell and taste. She arrives at the Perkins Institute for the Blind where she learns to communicate using tactile finger-spelling and Braille.
Ragnhild Kåta (1873 – 1947, Norway) was the first person with deafblindness in Norway to receive a formal education. At the age of three, she lost four of her five senses: sight, hearing, taste and smell, most likely from scarlet fever. At the age of 15, she started studying at the Hamar Institute for the Deaf where she learnt to read and write in Braille, but also to speak. She learnt to embroider, knit and weave, thus becoming independent.
Helen Keller (1880 – 1968, U.S.A.) she is probably the best