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Peer reviewedLadd, Paddy – Sign Language Studies, 1994
Comments on questions regarding Deaf culture, with particular reference to black Americans. It is suggested that it is essential to acknowledge that within cultures there is a range of views and values and that it is of fundamental importance to construct theories that embody that understanding as well as a dialectical relationship. (CK)
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Blacks, Conferences, Cultural Awareness
Peer reviewedWilbur, Ronnie B.; Petersen, Lesa – Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research, 1998
Productions of sentence stimuli by five ASL-English bilinguals and six signed-English users who know no ASL were compared in two conditions (speech-alone or signing-alone, speech and signing combined). Speech took longer combined than alone, whereas signed English took longer alone than combined. (Author/CR)
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Bilingualism, Efficiency, English
McHeimech, Zeinab – Collected Essays on Learning and Teaching, 2009
Can we effectively integrate Deaf students into our post-secondary classes before recognizing and listening to them? Studies indicate that Deaf students continue to struggle, be silenced, and experience isolation when mainstreamed. Deaf students, or second-language students, inevitably develop new identities once included; however, we cannot…
Descriptors: Postsecondary Education, Inclusion, Mainstreaming, Student Diversity
Heuer, Christopher Jon – ProQuest LLC, 2009
This qualitative case study investigated the process by which eight hearing parents went about making decisions to promote language acquisition and literacy learning in their deaf children, who or what influenced that process, and how they coped emotionally with the impact of deafness on literacy and language acquisition. Data from interview…
Descriptors: Deafness, Language Acquisition, Concept Mapping, Coping
Fajardo, I.; Canas, J. J.; Salmeron, L.; Abascal, J. – Behaviour & Information Technology, 2009
Deaf users might find it difficult to navigate through websites with textual content which, for many of them, constitutes the written representation of a non-native oral language. With the aim of testing how the information structure could compensate for this difficulty, 27 prelingual deaf users of sign language were asked to search a set of…
Descriptors: Access to Information, Accessibility (for Disabled), Deafness, Web Sites
Poveda, David; Pulido, Laura; Morgade, Marta; Messina, Claudia; Hedlova, Zuzana – Language and Education, 2008
This article examines storytelling events for children in a library and a children's bookstore in which storytellers are accompanied by sign language interpreters. The result is that both hearing and Deaf children participate in a literacy event in which storyteller and interpreter produce a multilingual, multimodal and multimedial narrative.…
Descriptors: Deaf Interpreting, Sign Language, Deafness, Multilingualism
Bonvillian, John D.; And Others – 1993
This study examined young children's hand usage when they produced American Sign Language signs and while they played, in order to determine their hand preference in early signing and to compare their hand use in signing with their hand preference in other, nonlinguistic, motor actions. Subjects were 24 young children (from the age of 12 months or…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Deafness, Handedness, Manual Communication
Peer reviewedLucas, Ceil; Valli, Clayton – Language in Society, 1991
Reports on one aspect of an ongoing study of language contact in the American deaf community. The ultimate goal of the study is a linguistic description of contact signing and a reexamination of claims that it is a pidgin. Patterns of language use are reviewed and the role of demographic information in judgments is examined. (29 references) (GLR)
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Deafness, Demography, English
Peer reviewedRitter-Brinton, Kathryn – CAEDHH Journal/La Revue ACESM, 1996
This article reflects on the efficacy debates for the instructional use of natural sign language with deaf students, in particular American Sign Language (ASL) versus systems of Manually Coded English (MCE). It responds to an earlier review article and urges greater tolerance of opposing views, respect for family choice in the matter, and better…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Communication Skills, Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education
Peer reviewedJohnston, Trevor – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2001
Re-examination of data on noun-verb pair comprehension and production in Australian and American Sign Language confirm the existence of formationally related noun-verb pairs in Auslan in which the verb displays a single movement and the noun displays a repeated movement. Overall, the derivational process appears closely linked to an iconic base…
Descriptors: Adults, American Sign Language, Children, Cultural Differences
Adamo-Villani, Nicolleta; Beni, Gerardo – Journal of Educational Technology Systems, 2007
We introduce a new method of sign language subtitling aimed at young deaf children who have not acquired reading skills yet, and can communicate only via signs. The method is based on: 1) the recently developed concept of "semantroid[TM]" (an animated 3D avatar limited to head and hands); 2) the design, development, and psychophysical evaluation…
Descriptors: Test Results, Semantics, Sign Language, Sentences
Boreus, Kristina – Disability & Society, 2007
This article sheds light on issues concerning discrimination in the history of deaf people in Sweden in the 20th century. With the help of a specific typology of concepts for analysing discrimination exercised through the use of language, it is shown how the categorization of the hearing impaired has changed over time and how, in this process of…
Descriptors: Deafness, Classification, Foreign Countries, Sign Language
Miller, Margery; Funayama, E. Sumie – Odyssey: New Directions in Deaf Education, 2008
The view that a deaf child with autism is just that--a deaf child first (because of the critical importance of communication) and an autistic child second--is the more prevalent today, especially in larger educational programs. But this was not always the case. In the past, placement decisions often were determined in the opposite way: Many deaf…
Descriptors: Placement, Autism, Deafness, Developmental Disabilities
Campbell-Rush, Peggy – Education Digest: Essential Readings Condensed for Quick Review, 2008
Explaining the importance of a good foundation in writing to educators would be a case of preaching to the choir. The same can be said about identifying the connection between reading and writing. Writing can occur in the primary classroom in three ways. Demonstration writing happens when the teacher composes and writes in front of the class,…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Writing Instruction, Teaching Methods, Elementary School Teachers
Morgan, Gary; Herman, Rosalind; Barriere, Isabelle; Woll, Bencie – Cognitive Development, 2008
In the course of language development children must solve arbitrary form-to-meaning mappings, in which semantic components are encoded onto linguistic labels. Because sign languages describe motion and location of entities through iconic movements and placement of the hands in space, child signers may find spatial semantics-to-language mapping…
Descriptors: Sentences, Semantics, Sign Language, Language Acquisition

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