I don't believe this topic has ever been addressed before in a full on thread, and I'm genuinely curious. What is the established site canon for deaf characters - and, more specifically, their education.
Personally, my main info comes from this website when it comes to British Deaf History. Not sure if anyone has more info on the subject that might be helpful.
I also know that the wizarding world will handle some specific details differently. Are deaf witches and wizards educated at Hogwarts? Do they have their own schools? Both? If they do have a different school, could a description for one or two schools be placed in the Education doc? How does this reflect in careers? What's the social attitude and rep behind this? Are there spells/can we create spells that accommodate deaf characters (private closed caption spells that allow deaf people to follow along in conversation with hearing people, etc.)?
I'm not sure if we really discuss disability and neurodiversity on site much - and it is viewed differently in modern day than in VE, so it can become a sensitive topic with VE likely being even less accepting than now - and I want to approach this topic as respectfully as possible.
Magic by Rune

Personally, my main info comes from this website when it comes to British Deaf History. Not sure if anyone has more info on the subject that might be helpful.
I also know that the wizarding world will handle some specific details differently. Are deaf witches and wizards educated at Hogwarts? Do they have their own schools? Both? If they do have a different school, could a description for one or two schools be placed in the Education doc? How does this reflect in careers? What's the social attitude and rep behind this? Are there spells/can we create spells that accommodate deaf characters (private closed caption spells that allow deaf people to follow along in conversation with hearing people, etc.)?
I'm not sure if we really discuss disability and neurodiversity on site much - and it is viewed differently in modern day than in VE, so it can become a sensitive topic with VE likely being even less accepting than now - and I want to approach this topic as respectfully as possible.
