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Connor, Carol McDonald – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2006
The purpose of this longitudinal case study was to closely examine one deaf child's experience with a cochlear implant and his speech, language, and communication skills from kindergarten through middle and high school using both developmental and sociocultural frameworks. The target child was one of the first children to receive a cochlear…
Descriptors: Longitudinal Studies, Skill Development, Speech Communication, Sign Language
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Flaherty, M.; Moran, A. – American Annals of the Deaf, 2004
Deaf people have difficulty reading and remembering English script because of its sound-based orthography. Logographs (e.g., kanji, Arabic numerals) should not pose the same challenge because they are based on meaning, not sound. Little research has been conducted to test this theory's validity cross-culturally. The present study was an attempt to…
Descriptors: Deafness, Japanese, English, Reading Difficulties
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Brenda Schick; Mary Pat Moeller – Applied Psycholinguistics, 1992
Examines whether manually coded English (MCE) sign language systems are learnable. Reading achievement and expressive English skills of deaf students educated using only a MCE sign system were examined. Deaf students had expressive English skills comparable to hearing students in respect to syntactical and lexical skills but were deficient in…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Deafness, English, Expressive Language
Miles, Barbara; McLetchie, Barbara – National Consortium on Deaf-Blindness, 2008
In children, concepts develop in a spiral, with the child at the center. A positive self-concept begins within a responsive caregiving environment. Concepts build upon one another. The more ideas and memories that a child has about the way the world and relationships work, the easier it is to develop further ideas. Once a child realizes, for…
Descriptors: Deaf Blind, Deafness, Concept Formation, Physical Environment
Akamatsu, C. Tane; Stewart, David A. – 1989
Intended to raise researchers' and teachers' awareness of fingerspelling as an important part of signed communication, a study examined its use with deaf children in the classroom. Five trained teachers of the deaf, participating in a demonstration total communication project in a public school in the Midwest, were videotaped in their own…
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education, Finger Spelling
Ratner, Vivienne – 1988
The paper examines issues concerned with the incidence of visual perceptual learning disabilities among deaf and partially hearing children. Evidence indicating a high incidence (15.5 percent of 682 deaf students) of visual perceptual deficits is offered, as is a definition of visual perception. The impact of visual perceptual deficits on…
Descriptors: Deafness, Etiology, Handicap Identification, Learning Disabilities
Kaiser-Grodecka, Irmina; Cieszynska, Jagoda – 1989
The natural sign language used by deaf children in Poland makes no distinction between present, future, and past tenses. Deaf pupils do not understand the notions of temporal sequence and duration of time intervals, and so are prevented from thinking of and planning for the future. The study with 15 deaf 12-year-old pupils and 15 deaf 14-year-old…
Descriptors: Age Differences, Concept Formation, Deafness, Elementary Secondary Education
Waldo, Lois; And Others – 1980
A training manual for teaching functional sign training to the severely multiply handicapped was developed using the Signing Exact English (SEE) system. The program, which was adapted from the Functional Speech and Language Training Program, is designed for persons who lack refined motor, speech, and language skills. Procedures are outlined to use…
Descriptors: Language Acquisition, Multiple Disabilities, Severe Disabilities, Sign Language
Wright, Lynda Joyce – 1987
The study compared two groups of young deaf adults, one whose primary family of socialization was deaf (N=12), and one whose primary family of socialization was hearing (N=12), to determine if differences existed in the sociocultural factors of identification with deaf cultural beliefs, experience with sign language, participation in adaptive…
Descriptors: Cultural Differences, Cultural Influences, Deafness, Family Influence
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Bornstein, Harry – Journal of Speech and Hearing Disorders, 1974
Descriptors: Deafness, Exceptional Child Education, Hearing Impairments, Instructional Materials
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Davis, Jackson – American Annals of the Deaf, 1974
Based upon responses from 363 schools and centered on all types of dramatics activities. (CH)
Descriptors: Deaf Interpreting, Deafness, Dramatics, Private Schools
Siegel, Bernard J., Ed.; And Others – 1981
This book contains 15 essays which provide an overview of the state of the art in the discipline of anthropology, including archaelology, biological anthropology, linguistics, regional studies, and cultural-social anthropology. Most of the authors are professors and researchers from departments of anthropology in colleges and universities. Topics…
Descriptors: American Indian Languages, Anthropology, Archaeology, Ethnology
Menyuk, Paula – 1979
Issues concerning the teaching of sign systems to severely communicatively handicapped persons are considered. It is explained that the differences causing severe communication handicaps will affect which aspects of language processing and which aspects of language will be affected. Suggestions are made as to why some individuals who have great…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Language Handicaps, Language Processing, Learning Theories
Wallick, Mollie Marcus – 1980
The paper describes a program of teaching simultaneous communication (total communication) to behaviorally disordered preschool children, and presents the cases of two autistic and two autisticlike children. Simultaneous communication involves tactile, visual, oral, and auditory modalities and combines spoken language with Signed English. Before…
Descriptors: Autism, Case Studies, Communication Skills, Emotional Disturbances
Stokoe, William C., Jr. – 1970
In this paper the author takes a positive not a negative view of sign language. It is the center of attention, not as an object of interest to the specialist in language, but as the central feature in the complex sociolinguistic and psycholinguistic system that makes the deaf person part of general American culture and at the same time part of a…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Classroom Research, Deafness, Finger Spelling
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