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Turner, Graham H. – Sign Language Studies, 1994
Turner's responses to discussion of deaf culture cover these topics: deaf perspective; approaches to description; transparency and explicitness; labeling; historical awareness; and "thinking beyond." (Contains seven references.) (LB)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Classification, Cultural Context, Deafness
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Luetke-Stahlman, Barbara; Beaver, Darcy – Perspectives in Education and Deafness, 1994
This article encourages hearing individuals in the elementary school community to learn sign language. Suggestions include having students teach students, having family sign classes, incorporating sign instruction throughout the day, giving everyone a name sign, and having schoolwide events in which signing is featured. (DB)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Elementary Education, Family Involvement, Hearing Impairments
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Stokoe, William C. – Sign Language Studies, 1995
Critiques the previous article by Torigoe and others (1995) and discusses research on indigenous gestural systems developed by people with deafness and shared with local hearing communities. Poses questions for further research in the field of indigenous gestural communication. (Seven references) (MDM)
Descriptors: Deafness, Foreign Countries, Language Attitudes, Language Research
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Stokoe, William C. – Sign Language Studies, 1991
Proposes the use of semantic phonology, a simple method of sign phonology. Semantic phonology invites one to look at a sign--a word of a primary sign language--as a marriage of noun and verb. (GLR)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Nonverbal Communication, Nouns, Phonology
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Luetke-Stahlman, Barbara; And Others – Perspectives in Education and Deafness, 1992
A mother of a hearing-impaired two year old offers examples of utilizing siblings (who have learned sign language) to foster the language development and socialization of the younger child. (DB)
Descriptors: Communication Skills, Hearing Impairments, Language Acquisition, Siblings
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Hyde, Merv; Power, Des – Sign Language Studies, 1992
Demographic study of the number of deaf users of Australian Sign Language (Auslan) identified over 15,000 deaf who used Auslan daily in interactions with deaf and hearing persons, and evidence of strong social and linguistic cohesion in the deaf community, but high levels of unemployment and underemployment. (16 references) (Author/CB)
Descriptors: Cultural Traits, Deafness, Demography, Foreign Countries
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LeMaster, Barbara C.; Dwyer, John P. – Sign Language Studies, 1991
Examines two sex-based variations in the Irish Sign Language of Dublin, Ireland, commonly referred to as "female" and "male" signs. The differences between women's knowledge of "male" signs and men's knowledge of female signs are a result of differences in cultural opportunities to acquire full facility with both…
Descriptors: Cultural Opportunities, Females, Foreign Countries, Language Variation
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Frostad, Per – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 1999
Investigates whether the reasons for deaf children's poor achievement lie in their strategy development. Reports that structural aspects of sign language counting may influence deaf children's thinking in a way that does not lead to a developed conceptual knowledge base, but rather to refined procedural competence. (Contains 31 references.)…
Descriptors: Arithmetic, Cognitive Processes, Deafness, Elementary Education
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Schiavetti, Nicholas; And Others – Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 1996
This study investigated speaking rate and voice onset time (VOT) in speech produced during simultaneous communication (SC) by speakers with normal hearing. The somewhat enlarged voicing contrast during SC was consistent with previous findings regarding the influence of rate changes on the temporal fine structure of speech and voicing contrast…
Descriptors: Articulation (Speech), Hearing Impairments, Manual Communication, Sign Language
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Stokoe, William C. – Sign Language Studies, 2000
Proposes that a mute verbal modeling system gets lodged in the brain, because the brain is human and modeling, representing, and communicating create connections in the brain. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Body Language, Brain Hemisphere Functions, Deafness, Language Acquisition
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Pietrandrea, Paola – Sign Language Studies, 2002
Presents results of a quantitative analysis that evaluates the incidence of iconicity in a sign language, Italian Sign Language (LIS). Argues that the high incidence of iconicity is a response to a need for economy. To justify the coexistence of iconicity and arbitrariness in the LIS lexicon, suggests a revisiting of the notion of arbitrariness.…
Descriptors: Dictionaries, Language Research, Linguistic Theory, Nonverbal Communication
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Daniels, Marilyn – Sign Language Studies, 2001
Describes Sign in Education, a pilot program in the United Kingdom that integrated Deaf children and hearing children in a hearing classroom with a culturally Deaf teacher who taught the national curriculum in British Sign Language one afternoon a week. Explores the advantage to the Deaf community, as well as the majority culture of adopting such…
Descriptors: Deafness, Foreign Countries, Mainstreaming, National Curriculum
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Blondel, Marion; Miller, Christopher – Sign Language Studies, 2001
Shows that the architecture of a children's poetic text is based on systematic use of repetition and contrast at different levels of analysis, which allow the continuous flow of gesture to be segmented into structural units of different relative size. Suggests the study of poetry allows the isolation of universals of language. (Author/VWL)
Descriptors: Deafness, Language Rhythm, Language Universals, Nursery Rhymes
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Adamo-Villani, Nicoletta; Beni, Gerardo – British Journal of Educational Technology, 2004
We present the design of a new 3D animation tool for self-teaching (signing and reading) finger spelling the first basic component in learning any sign language. We have designed a highly realistic hand with natural animation of the finger motions. Smoothness of motion (in real time) is achieved via programmable blending of animation segments. The…
Descriptors: Animation, Sign Language, Finger Spelling, Computer Assisted Instruction
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Wamae, Gertrude M.I.; Kang'ethe-Kamau, Rachael W. – British Journal of Special Education, 2004
Three languages are widely used in schools in Kenya English, Kiswahili and Kenya Sign Language. Many pupils with hearing impairments are taught separately from the mainstream, in specialist settings. The fact that most of the formal teaching, assessment and examination processes in Kenyan schools rely upon spoken and written English compounds the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Students, African Languages, Sign Language
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