
2015
publication – Taonga source: Wellington Deaf Society
Absolutely Positively Windy Deaf: June 2015


2013
publication – Taonga source: Wellington Deaf Society
Absolutely Positively Windy Deaf: September 2013


2020
article – Taonga source: Stuff
I feel included’: How press briefings with NZSL are making a difference
For many people in the Deaf community, the coronavirus pandemic was the most they had ever seen their language on television. But its meant more than simply accessing information – it includes the Deaf community in conversations.


2021
video – Taonga source: Wellington Deaf Society
Wellington Deaf Society: Welcome Home Party!
Wellington Deaf Society finally has a new home, a new Deaf Club! A formal opening on Saturday 24 April 2021 to celebrate its new building since selling its Marion Street building in 2015.


2014
publication – Taonga source: Wellington Deaf Society
Absolutely Positively Windy Deaf: May 2014


2016
publication – Taonga source: Wellington Deaf Society
Windy Hands: June 2016


1993
publication – Taonga source: National Foundation for Deaf and Hard of Hearing
NFD Communicate: June 1993


1997
publication – Taonga source: National Foundation for Deaf and Hard of Hearing
NFD Communicate: Spring 1997


1997
publication – Taonga source: National Foundation for Deaf and Hard of Hearing
NFD Communicate: Winter 1997


2015
publication – Taonga source: Wellington Deaf Society
Absolutely Positively Windy Deaf: May 2015

NZSL Stories

2014
publication – Taonga source: Wellington Deaf Society
Absolutely Positively Windy Deaf: September 2014


1986
video – Taonga source: Television New Zealand Archive
Te Aro Deaf students featured in ‘The Video Dispatch’
Heather Campbell, a Teacher of the Deaf, talks about the need for Deaf children and their families to have access to language early in life. This episode screened during Deaf Awareness Week in 1986.


1994
article – Taonga source: City Voice
In the mainstream
Theresa Newson and Maria Griffiths are completely deaf. They are also students at St Catherine's College, Kilbirnie. Their mothers looked at several schools in the Wellington region because they wanted their daughters to stay at home rather than go to Van Asch.