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Preparing for the interview
- When setting up the interview, ask the candidate how he or she will prefer to communicate during the interview.
- Inform the receptionist that you are expecting a deaf or hard-of-hearing candidate.
- Find a location with good lighting.
- Have a written itinerary and company literature available.
Interviewing with an interpreter
- Position the interpreter next to the interviewer so the candidate can easily see both individuals.
- Clarify whether the candidate will speak for himself or herself, or whether the interpreter will voice what the candidate signs.
- Make eye contact with the candidate.
- Address your questions directly to the candidate, not the interpreter.
- For more information on working with an interpreter, click here.
Interviewing without an interpreter
- Provide a written copy of the interview questions.
- Speak clearly and slowly.
- Use gestures and facial expressions.
- Maintain eye contact by looking directly at the person.
- Encourage the deaf individual to let you know if your communication is unclear.
- Rephrase things if necessary.
- Ask open-ended questions.
- Use paper and pencil if necessary.
- Ask the candidate to demonstrate his or her skills during the interview by operating a piece of equipment or software application, etc.
- Resist putting your hands on or near your mouth as you speak.
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Testimonials
“After being selected from a highly competitive pool of co-op candidates nationwide, the NTID student we hired became a fresh infusion of young talent and motivation.”
-Booz Allen Hamilton
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