Anna Trupiano had to explain to her first grade class of hard of hearing students that farts can be heard. Photo / Facebook
A teacher for the deaf was forced to break it to her hearing impaired students that people can hear them fart after a six-year-old loudly passed gas in class.
Anna Trupiano revealed in a hilarious Facebook post, the moment she explained that farts were audible to her stunned, deaf first graders.
Trupiano teaches first grade at Kendall Demonstration Elementary School in Washington DC - which serves deaf, hard of hearing and blind students, according to the Daily Mail.
She explained that the subject arose in class after a six-year-old deaf student passed gas so loudly in class that his hearing peers began to laugh.
The child, confused by the laughter, was then taught over a 15-minute impromptu lesson that farts make noise.
Trupiano's Facebook post, which has now garnered over 21,000 likes, begins: "Today in first grade one of my deaf students farted loudly in class and other students turned to look at them.
"The following is a snippet of a 15-minute conversation that happened entirely in American Sign Language among the group of deaf students and I."
Trupiano then documents part of the exchange between her and students, as the youngsters are both horrified and intrigued by the stunning realisation.
Driver wrote: "In all the sadness of this weekend, I wanted to share a thread that I know will remind you there is good and laughter and revelation in the world still x."
Trupiano spoke to GOOD after the incident.
"I know it started with farts, but the real issue is that many of my students aren't able to learn about these things at home or from their peers because they don't have the same linguistic access," she said.
"So many of my students don't have families who can sign well enough to explain so many things it's incredibly isolating for these kids," she continued.
"I would love to see a world where my students can learn about anything from anyone they interact with during their day,' she told GOOD. 'Whether that means learning about the solar system, the candy options at a store, or even farts, it would be so great for them to have that language access anywhere they go."