Deaf Interpreters


Education and Training > Deaf Interpreters > Skills and Abilities
110500
100110
Deaf Interpreters

Deaf Interpreters - Skills and Abilities

Interpreters and translators need to:

Communicate

  • Speak clearly so listeners can understand.
  • Understand spoken information.
  • Understand written information.
  • Listen to others and ask questions.
  • [ More ]
  • Write clearly so other people can understand.
  • Read and understand work-related materials.

Reason and Problem Solve

  • Follow guidelines to arrange objects or actions in a certain order.
  • Notice when something is wrong or is likely to go wrong.
  • Analyze ideas and use logic to determine their strengths and weaknesses.
  • Concentrate and not be distracted while performing a task.
  • [ More ]
  • Use reasoning to discover answers to problems.
  • Understand new information or materials by studying and working with them.
  • Judge the costs and benefits of a possible action.
  • Make sense of information that seems without meaning or organization.
  • Think of original, unusual, or creative ways to solve problems.
  • Combine several pieces of information and draw conclusions.
  • Think of new ideas about a topic.
  • Develop rules that group items in various ways.
  • Recognize the nature of a problem.

Manage Oneself, People, Time, and Things

  • Check how well one is learning or doing something.
  • Go back and forth between two or more activities or sources of information without becoming confused.
  • Manage the time of self and others.

Work with People

  • Look for ways to help people.
  • Be aware of others’ reactions and understand the possible causes.
  • Change behavior in relation to others’ actions.
  • Use several methods to learn or teach new things.
  • [ More ]
  • Teach others how to do something.
Source: Illinois Career Information System (CIS) brought to you by Illinois Department of Employment Security.