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ASL-for-All 5K (Walk, Run & Roll)

Sat September 28, 2024 Olathe, KS 66062 US Directions

Events

ASL-for-All 5K (Walk, Run & Roll)

8:30AM CDT - 9:30AM CDT

Tot/Kids-Fun-Run

9:30AM CDT - 9:45AM CDT

High School/ College Student Only

8:30AM CDT - 9:30AM CDT

Race Website

Additional race information can be found at https://www.museumofdeaf.org/annual5k.

Place

15501 Indian Creek Pkwy
Olathe, KS US 66062

Description

Join us for our SECOND annual ASL for All 5K fundraiser to foster Olathe as a "Shared Signing Community”! Shared signing communities are localities where both Deaf and non-Deaf community members use a shared visual language to communicate with one another. Non-signers are welcomed!

This SECOND annual ASL for ALL 5K fundraiser will take place on the Indian Creek Trail leading from and returning to Frontier Park.  Following the 5K race, there will be two Fun-Runs for children (50 yards for tots 6 yrs or under & 100 yards for kids aged 7 to 10) at the park in conjunction with an ASL Festival area offering booths.  ASL Performances will be provided at the conclusion of the Awards Ceremony.  

Race Schedule:
7:30 am- Registration Opens
8:30 am- 5K Race Begins
9:30 am- Tots-Fun-Run (50 yards and 100 yards) Kids-Fun-Run
9:35 am- ASL Performance

Participant Packets will be ready for pick-up on Friday, Sept 27th to from 10 am to 4 pm at the Museum of Deaf History, Arts & Culture, Inc. 455 E. Park Street, Olathe. Water and refreshments will be available to registered participants. (Please note: Runners, walkers, and rollers who register after the Sept 12th deadline are not guaranteed a race t-shirt or size.)

Check out the newsreel from our 2023 event: https://www.kshb.com/news/local-news/asl-for-all-5k-promotes-shared-signing-community-in-kansas-city-area

All proceeds from this event will be split between the Kansas School for the Deaf Endowment Association (KSDEA) and Museum of Deaf History, Arts & Culture (MDHAC) in support of their missions in fostering shared signing communities. 

 

MORE INFORMATION

 

American Sign Language (ASL):

ASL is a natural language that serves as the most predominant sign language of Deaf communities in the United States of America and most of Anglophone Canada. ASL is NOT signing in or shorthand for English.  It is a complete and organized visual language that is expressed by employing both manual and non-manual features.  It is a natural language that has the same linguistic properties as spoken language, with its own grammar, syntax and vocabulary.  

ASL originated more than 200 years ago from the intermixing of local Native American sign language, French Sign Language, and Martha’s Vineyard Sign language (developed signs from a once-thriving shared signing community on the island of Martha’s Vineyard). While ASL is the most predominant, there is growing recognition of the use of Black American Sign Language, Plains Indian Sign Language, and Mexican Sign Language in the United States.  

Currently, other than English, ASL is the third-most taught language at high schools, colleges, and universities after Spanish and French.  For more information about where you can take ASL classes, please check with your local high school, Johnson County Community College (JCCC), and the University of Kansas (KU)- Edwards Campus. 

Shared Signing Communities:

Shared signing communities are defined as communities where BOTH Deaf people and non-Deaf use sign language to communicate with each other in the areas where they live, work, congregate, or play. Such places are regarded as different from the mainstream where deaf people mostly are surrounded by hearing, non-signing people in their families, schools, and workplaces.  It is believed that shared signing communities have existed on Earth for thousands of years in various countries.  The most notable in the United States of America is Martha’s Vineyard from the early 18th century to the early 1950’s. For a time, it was known as a place where “everyone spoke sign language”.  For more information about the history of Deaf people on Martha’s Vineyard, please view: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Ioi7COpA7A 

How Signed Language Benefits All:

Using signed language allows you to communicate with everyone in your environment without barriers or frustrations to anyone.  Signing conversations are efficient and you can go deeper in the conversations without cutting out details.  Sign language is good for the brain, boosting cognition, creativity, functionality, memory, spatial awareness, mental rotation skills, and more!  Signing increases your visual field responses as you become more aware of the things you see and reacting more quickly.  And maybe more importantly, using sign language increases your bond and connection with others where you can be more in tune with others’ emotions and nuances.  Babies, both Deaf or non-Deaf, can use sign language as early as 6 months, and this jump-starts the building blocks of language which provides babies with many benefits that would last a lifetime!

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