Suhayb Ali starts kindergarten this fall, and his family boasts that the energetic 5-year-old with a fondness for "Curious George" will be well ahead of his peers.
But that preparedness might not have happened if not for a specialized preschool program at the Metro Deaf School, a small pre-K through 12 charter near the State Fairgrounds in St. Paul.
Suhayb, who is deaf and has been diagnosed with autism, knew the sign for just one word before starting preschool: shoe.
Now, nearly three years later, he has a vast command of American Sign Language (ASL). It can be difficult to keep up with his fast-paced signing, said his sister, Hamdi Sheikhsaid, a University of Minnesota physiology student.
But for other children like him, that lifeline came to an abrupt end after the last legislative session.
The final education budget bill that emerged after weeks of contentious negotiations between the Legislature and Gov. Mark Dayton's administration left out the funding needed for parents to enroll preschoolers who are hearing impaired. Metro Deaf School is the only school in the Twin Cities to offer preschool instruction in ASL, the predominant sign language in the United States, and one of only two such schools in Minnesota. The other school is in Faribault, Minn. More than 30 school districts have placed hearing-impaired preschoolers at Metro Deaf since 1997.
Susan Lane-Outlaw, executive director at the Metro Deaf School, was dismayed when she learned legislators effectively prevented parents from enrolling their preschool-age children with a disability at charter schools. State law allows that option at charter schools once a child enters kindergarten.
Research shows those early years are a critical period for language acquisition. "If we wait until kindergarten, which is when parents can place here, they've lost that opportunity of language," Lane-Outlaw said.