"Deaf Poets Society: for Writers with Disabilities"

by Corinne Segal

Deaf Poets Society, a new digital literary magazine, has a message for writers with disabilities: We see you. We want you to be here. And this is your space.

Writer Sarah Katz, the magazine’s founder, grew up in North Potomac, Maryland, and attended a school with a program for students who were deaf or hard of hearing. “I had grown up around other deaf and hard of hearing people and took for granted that I had easy access to other people like me,” she said.

That wasn’t the case at the University of Maryland, College Park, where Katz said she was the “only deaf student I knew.” As a young writer, she began seeking out the disability community and went on to earn an MFA in poetry from American University.

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Question
Use the passage below from “Deaf Poets Society” to answer the question.

Which best describes the central idea of this passage?

(1 point)
Responses

The literary world is working to have better options for people with disabilities.
The literary world is working to have better options for people with disabilities.

Dead Poets Society was a popular film released in 1989.
Dead Poets Society was a popular film released in 1989.

Sarah Katz was born deaf and was the only deaf person in her school.
Sarah Katz was born deaf and was the only deaf person in her school.

There are ways to use text and audio to make literature more accessible for people with disabilities.

1 answer

The best description of the central idea of the passage is:

The literary world is working to have better options for people with disabilities.