Deaf Awareness Month: Make Your Meetings Deaf Aware
HearingWe’ve put together these tips to make meetings more accessible and inclusive for deaf people and those with hearing loss.
Check if anyone needs communication support
Ask before the meeting if anyone needs communication support. This could be a sign language interpreter, notetaker or speech to text reporter. Allow plenty of time to arrange these.
Let people know who will speak
This lets people pin the speakers, which will help the lipread if they need to.
Make sure you’re muted
Mute your microphone when you’re not speaking. This is really important as background noise can be distracting and confusing – but don’t forget to unmute the mic before you speak.
Turn your camera on
Keep still and stay close to the camera. Someone might be trying to lipread.
If you’re going to use British Sign Language (BSL), don’t blur your background because your hands may become blurred when you sign.
Say your name and use visual cues
Say your name before speaking so others can look at your face to lipread. Use visual cues, such as raising your hand before speaking.
Nominate a note taker
The note taker should summarise actions and next steps.