Elias Hofgaard


Elias Peter Hansen Hofgaard was a Norwegian pioneer educator for deaf people.
Elias had employed the "speaking method" on very talented deaf students with good results, still it surprised many when he declared that he would use the method with Ragnhild Kåta. Hofgaard reasoned that a deaf and blind child would have most use of learning to speak. Hofgaard first taught Kåta to pronounce the letters, then to combine two letters into a syllable, and finally multi-syllabic words before trying to attach meaning to what had, until then, been presented as a complicated game.
The first words used were: ur, fot, and bord. The words were associated with the objects over several days until Ragnhild understood that the words named the object. After that she learned to understand others by placing her hand on their lips as they spoke, she learned to write, and to read Braille.During the summer of 1889, Kåta met with Mary Swift Lamson who had taught Laura Bridgman at the Perkins School for the Blind. At that time, Mrs. Lamson reported that Kåta could already speak simple sentences. In 1890, ten-year-old Helen Keller was introduced to the story of Ragnhild Kåta and was inspired by her ability to learn to speak.
He was born in Berg, Østfold, and was a brother-in-law of Lars Havstad. He died in a railway accident at Ljan in 1906.
He established Hamar Døvstummeinstitut at Hamar in 1882, and chaired the school for 25 years. He is particularly known for the education of the deafblind girl Ragnhild Tollefsdatter Kaata, probably among the first deafblind who learned to talk.