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Luetke-Stahlman, Barbara; Milburn, Wanda O. – American Annals of the Deaf, 1996
This paper describes Seeing Essential English (SEE), which is a manual code of English designed to specifically reflect English, and signed in English word order. The paper attempts to clear up misconceptions concerning SEE and confusion between SEE and Signing Exact English, provide some historical background about its development, and review…
Descriptors: Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education, History, Instructional Effectiveness

Luetke-Stahlman, Barbara – American Annals of the Deaf, 1988
The study evaluated characteristics of instructional bimodal communication in classrooms for the hearing impaired using Signing Exact English or Signed English. Findings indicated some teachers accurately and proficiently encoded semantic information in their instruction. A requirement of 80% or better voice-to-sign ratio ability is suggested for…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education, Hearing Impairments
Luetke-Stahlman, Barbara – Teaching English to Deaf and Second-Language Students, 1982
Discusses learning to read by hearing impaired children and maintains that given a language base (in sign alone, oral and/or signed English), a total communication environment, and the opportunity to utilize various modes to decode written English, it appears likely that hearing impaired children can develop reading and writing skills in English.…
Descriptors: Decoding (Reading), Hearing Impairments, Literacy, Manual Communication

Luetke-Stahlman, Barbara – Sign Language Studies, 1984
Study indicates that hearing impaired residential students are more proficient users of American Sign Language than are hearing impaired children enrolled in local, public school programs, and older such residential students are more proficient in the language than are younger students. (SL)
Descriptors: Adolescents, American Sign Language, Children, Comparative Analysis
Luetke-Stahlman, Barbara – ACEHI Journal, 1988
The study compared scores of 2 groups of hearing-impaired students ages 5 to 12 years on a literacy battery. Subjects (n=73) were receiving instruction which either completely encoded spoken English or incompletely encoded spoken English. Those receiving completely encoded English instruction tended to score higher on achievement tests especially…
Descriptors: American Sign Language, Cued Speech, Elementary Education, English Instruction
Luetke-Stahlman, Barbara – ACEHI Journal, 1992
Questions asked by parents of 12 young hearing children were compared with those asked by hearing parents of 17 preschoolers with deafness who used various linguistic input models (i.e., oral English only, cued speech, signed/manual English). Similar parent questioning strategies were found among groups matched for mean length of utterance.…
Descriptors: Cued Speech, Deafness, Interaction Process Analysis, Language Acquisition