Edith Mansford Fitzgerald (1877โ1940) was a deaf American woman who invented a system for the deaf to learn proper placement of words in the construction of sentences. Her method, which was known as the 'Fitzgerald Key,' was used to teach those with hearing disabilities in three-quarters of the schools in the United States.
Fitzgerald's seminal work 'Straight Language for the Deaf: A System of Instruction for Deaf Children' was published in 1926 and was widely influential in the field of deaf education.[10] Because the "Fitzgerald Key" gave additional visual support to those who had not heard language construction,[11] it allowed students to correct their own grammar and syntax mistakes.[12] At one time, her system was so widely used that three-quarters of the schools in the United States teaching those with hearing difficulties used it.[2][13] Her book had been through nine editions by 1962.[14]
In 2018 the Virginia Capitol Foundation announced that Fitzgerald's name would be on the Virginia Women's Monument's glass Wall of Honor.[15]
Selected works
Fitzgerald, Edith Mansford. Signs and pure oralism. Washington, D.C.: National Association of the Deaf.
Kennard, Marie Sewell; Fitzgerald, Edith Mansford (1939). Suggestions for mental development. Cave Springs, Georgia: Georgia School for the Deaf.
Kennard, Marie Sewell; Fitzgerald, Edith Mansford (1939). Straight language discusses arithmetic. Cave Springs, Georgia: Georgia School for the Deaf.
Kennard, Marie Sewell; Fitzgerald, Edith Mansford (1941). Nature study. Cave Springs, Georgia: Georgia School for the Deaf.
^Nasukiewicz, Jennifer (Fall 1998). "Deaf Inventors"(PDF). Washington, DC: Gallaudet University. p. 6. Archived from the original(PDF) on 23 December 2015. Retrieved 21 December 2015.