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Luftig, Richard L.; Lloyd, Lyle L. – 1980
The study involving 60 undergraduate students investigated sign language as a function of sign translucency (the perceived relationship between a sign and its referent) and referential concreteness. Translucency and concreteness levels were varied and naive sign language learners attempted to learn a list of sign referent pairs. Results indicated…
Descriptors: Deafness, Exceptional Child Research, Higher Education, Language Handicaps
Rittenhouse, Robert K.; Myers, James J. – 1978
The document reports on a seminar sponsored by the West Central Region for Low-Incident Handicapped Children, on the acquisition, construction, and use of American Sign Language with severely handicapped children. Topics addressed include the cognitive preconditions to language, sign formational rules, the structure of sign, and American Sign…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Cognitive Processes, Language Acquisition, Manual Communication
Stokoe, William; Kuschel, Rolf – 1979
Field researchers of sign language are the target of this methodological guide. The prospective researcher is briefed on the rationale of sign language study as language study and as distinct from the study of kinesics. Subjects covered include problems of translating, use of interpreters, and ethics. Instruments for obtaining social and language…
Descriptors: Data Collection, Field Studies, Guidelines, Language Research
PDF pending restorationCarr, Edward G. – 1978
The acquisition of expressive sign language was studied in four autistic children (ages 10-15 years). Ss were taught expressive sign labels for common objects using a training procedure consisting of prompting, fading, and stimulus totation. The signing of three of the Ss was found to be controlled solely by the visual cues associated with the…
Descriptors: Autism, Exceptional Child Research, Expressive Language, Language Acquisition
Greenberg, Joanne – 1970
The story of Margaret, the daughter of deaf parents, depicts the frustrations and difficulties encountered in the silent world of the deaf. The text describes the family struggling through a life made more difficult by the naivete of the parents who, insulated from sound, received an inadequate education and were perplexed by things that most…
Descriptors: Adjustment (to Environment), Biographies, Communication Problems, Family Problems
Peer reviewedKlima, Edward S. – Cognition, 1976
Examines the form that poetic function assumes in American Sign Language, a language that has a structural organization different from oral languages and where the possibilities for poetic organization are radically different. Examples of a complex type of composition called art-sign distinguished by three levels of structure are analyzed.…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Art Song, Comparative Analysis, Expressive Language
Peer reviewedFischer, Susan; Gough, Bonnie – Sign Language Studies, 1978
The role of verbs in American Sign Language (ASL) is investigated. Verb mutations in ASL are very different from the kinds of grammatical deformations that occur in English, and are different from those that occur in spoken languages as a whole. (HP)
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Deafness, Grammar, Manual Communication
Peer reviewedFristoe, Macalyne; Lloyd, Lyle L. – Mental Retardation, 1977
Listed with ordering information and in some cases brief annotations are 61 resources pertinent to use of manual communication by retarded, autistic, and aphasic individuals who cannot communicate effectively by speaking. (JG)
Descriptors: Aphasia, Autism, Bibliographies, Deafness
Peer reviewedStokoe, William C. – Sign Language Studies, 1986
Four keynote papers, presented at an international conference on sign language research, discussed general linguistic issues of sign language, psycholinguistics, sociolinguistics, and language acquisition. (CB)
Descriptors: Deafness, Foreign Countries, Language Acquisition, Language Research
Dreher, Barbara; Duell, Ellen – Perspectives for Teachers of the Hearing Impaired, 1987
The simultaneous presentation of picture book and signer on split screen videotape made literature more accessible and vital to hearing-impaired students. Suggestions are provided for preparing students for the viewing, discussing the story after viewing, and making videotapes. (CB)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Elementary Education, Hearing Impairments, Sign Language
Peer reviewedHoffmeister, Robert; Moores, Donald F. – American Annals of the Deaf, 1987
Code switching (between oral and manual communication ) was examined with seven prelingually deaf adults. Deaf signers with deaf parents who learned American sign language (ASL) at an early age evidenced the most code switching behavior and the most English-like signed segments. Early signers with hearing parents were least likely to vary from…
Descriptors: Adults, American Sign Language, Code Switching (Language), Communication Skills
Peer reviewedCaccamise, Frank; And Others – Journal of the American Deafness and Rehabilitation Association, 1988
The article stresses (1) the importance of vocational rehabilitation personnel and deaf clients establishing effective communication, and (2) the importance of an integrated approach to sign communication skills assessment and development for vocational rehabilitation personnel. Georgia and New York State programs and the Sign Communication…
Descriptors: Counselor Client Relationship, Counselor Evaluation, Counselor Qualifications, Deafness
Hamilton, Harley – Perspectives for Teachers of the Hearing Impaired, 1987
"Grandfather Moose" rhymes, written to follow the Mother Goose tradition, are short, appealing, easy-to-memorize sign language nursery rhymes which employ visual poetic devices such as similar signs and transitional flow of movement. (CB)
Descriptors: Childrens Literature, Hearing Impairments, Language Arts, Nursery Rhymes
Manion, Ian G.; Bucher, Bradley – Applied Research in Mental Retardation, 1986
Five nonverbal severely mentally retarded and three nonverbal deaf children learned to use a sign-rehearsal strategy in one of two memory tasks. Generalization to a simpler task was accomplished for two Ss trained in a more complex task. (Author/CL)
Descriptors: Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education, Generalization, Learning Strategies
Peer reviewedGoldin-Meadow, Susan; Mylander, Carolyn – Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1984
Reports that four deaf children of hearing parents, who lacked usable conventional linguistic input, developed a gestural communication system that showed some of the structural regularities characteristic of early child language. Suggests that communication with a number of language-like properties can develop in an atypical language-learning…
Descriptors: Child Language, Deafness, Early Experience, Imitation


