Anne Mansfield Sullivan (1866–1936) The proof is in the pupil. In this case, Helen
Keller, a blind and deaf pupil, was a terror. Wily and mean, Helen was also
animal-like. Nevertheless, her teacher, Anne Sullivan, enabled her to become
an international celebrity.
Sullivan pioneered the teaching of individuals without sight and
without hearing. Today we speak of a
deaf culture, but this term was
not used in the era of Anne Sullivan. "Teacher," as Helen always called her,
is credited with making it possible to reach students who were thought to
have mental retardation.
The daughter of Irish immigrants, Sullivan was born in Feeding Hills,
Mass., on April 14, 1866 and entered the almshouse at eight when her mother
died and her father abandoned her and her brother. Half-blind herself, she
went to the Perkins School for the Blind in Boston at age fourteen without
a toothbrush, hat, or coat; her only possessions were a shirt and stockings
tied in a bundle.
At age twenty-one, Sullivan took a job offered by the Keller family
in Tuscumbia, Ala., to teach the Kellers’ daughter, Helen. Helen Keller was
an angry and frustrated child, but she was not stupid. Sullivan saw this and
began her assault on Helen’s locked mind. Within a month, she made contact
with Helen in the now famous pump story, immortalized in the drama
The
Miracle Worker. Sullivan fingerspelled words into Helen’s hand, each word
suiting an action. Finally, Helen, feeling water over her hand, realized the
connection between word and object. She had broken the code and realized that
everything had a name.
Sullivan’s methods were practical. She taught Helen to play through
games and exercises, stimulating her to ask the names of the motions. She
kept a menagerie of animals for Helen to help her understand movement. She
progressed to abstractions like peace and God as soon as her pupil was ready.
Sullivan wanted to make Helen as normal as possible, giving her every
experience she could. She worked at teaching her to sit, stand, and walk properly.
As soon as Helen could distinguish between right and wrong, "Teacher" sent
her to bed for misdeeds. Laziness, carelessness, untidiness, and procrastination
were dealt with by ingenuity, humor, and light sarcasm.
Helen used the manual alphabet for three years before she began to
speak. When Helen was nine, Sullivan was rewarded with the words "I am not
dumb now." It was one of the most dramatic achievements in the history of
teaching.
Sullivan’s great discovery was that a child should not be taught
each word separately by a separate definition but instead should be given
endless repetition of language he or she does not understand all day long.
Sullivan continually spelled words into Helen’s hand to mimic the way a hearing
child in the cradle absorbs words. This method had never before been put into
practice in the education of a deaf child, especially a deaf-blind one.
When Helen attended a school for deaf pupils in New York, Annie Sullivan
went along. At Cambridge School and Radcliffe College
, Sullivan attended
classes, interpreting instruction and looking up words for Helen. She made
herself eye and ear to Helen and supplied knowledge to a starving mind as
she fired her pupil’s drive to study hard. After college, Sullivan accompanied
Helen on worldwide lecture tours as Helen became a famous author and personality.
Extraordinarily close, teacher and pupil spent much of their lives
together. The name "Teacher" has been enriched by Annie Sullivan’s dedicated
life, persistent high standards, and creative instruction.
Visit the following web sites for more information on Anne Mansfield Sullivan
Macy:
Who Was Anne Mansfield Sullivan Macy?
http://ia.essortment.com/whowasanneman_rqfq.htm
This brief biography adds more details about Anne Sullivan’s personal life
to the information in your textbook.
Helen Keller Pictures
http://www.afb.org/info_documents.asp?kitid=10=1
The American Foundation for the Blind has a collection of photos of Helen
Keller, including several with Anne Sullivan.
"Education in the Light of Present-Day Knowledge and Need"
http://www.afb.org/info_document_view.asp?documentid=957
This was the address that Anne Mansfield Sullivan Macy delivered at Temple
University when she was awarded an honorary degree there shortly before her
death in 1932.