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Yongjian Luo; Linda Tsung; Wei Wang – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
Affluent in semiotic resources and containing great communicability, Chinese university emblems have yet to attract much academic research. Drawing on studies of social semiotics, typographic landscaping and multimodal concepts, this paper explores the linguistic and social dimension of meaning-making practice and the entanglement of Chinese and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Imagery, Semiotics, Signs
Oscar L. Ocuto – Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 2024
Engaged communication between mother and a child in their early developmental stages is one of the predictors of children's development of higher-order thinking skills. For deaf children, this engaged communication between mother and child hinges on the home language environment (HLE) being fully accessible to the child. This research uses…
Descriptors: Deafness, Family Environment, Parent Child Relationship, Sign Language
Blau, Shane Reuven – ProQuest LLC, 2023
Infants are born highly sensitive to the natural patterns found in languages. They use their perceptual sensitivity to acquire detailed information about the structure of languages in their environment. To date, most studies of infant perception and early language acquisition have investigated spoken/auditory languages and hearing infants (e.g.…
Descriptors: Deafness, Linguistic Input, Language Patterns, Infants
Krause, Christina M. – ZDM: Mathematics Education, 2023
Research on language in mathematics education is largely dominated by a 'normalcy' of spoken languages. This modal hegemony does not only affect a whole group of learners in failing to provide access that is epistemologically equitable--those using sign language as their preferred mode for mathematical discourse--it also obscures our view on the…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Language Usage, Deafness, Hearing Impairments
Kristen Harmon – Sign Language Studies, 2023
The idea of a sign language town, or a Deaf utopia, where Deaf and signing people can come together to live in a geographical or figurative homeland has long persisted in US Deaf life, letters, and literature. In the wake of the Milan Congress of 1880, Alexander Graham Bell's alarming rhetoric concerning "a deaf mute variety of the human…
Descriptors: Deafness, History, Sign Language, Literature
Sandra L. Waldron – ProQuest LLC, 2023
In the United States, teachers have been both respected and villainized in popular culture and politics. These varying and conflicting cultural ideas and representations of teachers impact policy design, shaping the distribution of benefits and burdens imposed on teachers. The media play an important role in both crafting and reinforcing cultural…
Descriptors: Teachers, Teacher Strikes, Social Influences, Political Influences
Amna Ali; Dianne C. Barker; Monika Vishwakarma; Nina C. Schleicher; Trent O. Johnson; Lisa Henriksen – Journal of American College Health, 2023
Objective: Two-thirds of U.S. colleges are near vape shops, where higher rates of underage sales exist. This study examined vape shop compliance with state-mandated age-of-sale signs, the presence of age-of-entry signs and the tobacco industry's "We Card" sign. Participants: Random sample of 614 California vape shops, stratified by…
Descriptors: College Students, Smoking, Retailing, Purchasing
Boers-Visker, Eveline – Language Learning, 2023
This study reports on strategies to indicate plural referents in hearing learners of Sign Language of the Netherlands. This is the first explorative study that focuses on L2 expressions of plurality in a sign language. Using data from two datasets, I examined when learners start to express plural and which strategies they apply, and I noted…
Descriptors: Sign Language, Form Classes (Languages), Language Acquisition, Second Language Learning
Tilbe Göksun; Asli Aktan-Erciyes; Dilay Z. Karadöller; Ö. Ece Demir-Lira – Child Development Perspectives, 2025
Children need to learn the demands of their native language in the early vocabulary development phase. In this dynamic process, parental multimodal input may shape neurodevelopmental trajectories while also being tailored by child-related factors. Moving beyond typically characterized group profiles, in this article, we synthesize growing evidence…
Descriptors: Parent Participation, Parent Child Relationship, Child Language, Vocabulary Development
Matthew R. Deroo; Daryl Axelrod; Jennifer Kahn – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2025
This manuscript examines multimodal storytelling as community inquiry for an urban high school class of 30 first- and second-generation bi/multilingual immigrant students, most of whom maintained transnational connections. We share how these students, in an A.P. Research class, engaged in community-based inquiry and utilized various multimodal…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, High School Students, Immigrants, Advanced Placement
LaReina Hingson; Keely Song; David Schekall – Journal of Dance Education, 2025
Productions can be made more accessible for Deaf and hard of hearing (DHoH) dancers, performers, and audiences. This article provides ideas and guidelines on how to include and accommodate them. Reflecting on our experiences developing the dance theatrical production of "Within Dreams," we describe the need for making space for DHoH…
Descriptors: Deafness, Hard of Hearing, American Sign Language, Dance
Ernst D. Thoutenhoofd; Liz Adams Lyngbäck; Camilla Lindahl – Nordic Journal of Studies in Educational Policy, 2025
This paper discusses disadvantaging situations that deaf students encounter in higher education in Sweden. We report two recent cases of deaf students' academic welfare being put at risk. We foreground in these cases the 'odd situations' that arise when provisions that fail to access the particular nature of deaf experience also fail to secure…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Deafness, College Students, Student Rights
Johnson, Robert E.; Liddell, Scott K. – Sign Language Studies, 2021
This article follows Johnson and Liddell (2011a, 2011b, 2011c, 2012) and Liddell and Johnson (2019), which introduce the concepts of sequentiality and contrast, a segmental framework consisting of postures and trans-forms, and features describing the configuration of the fingers and of the thumb. This article further develops that theory of…
Descriptors: Phonetics, Sign Language, Human Body, Guidelines
Yaqing Chen; Lan Ni – Language Policy, 2024
As the first study addressing family language policy (FLP) in d/Deaf-parented families in China, the current research explores language ideologies, practices and management held by different members within the families. Children of d/Deaf adults (Codas) form an unusual bimodal bilingual group, and the study concerning this group prompts us to…
Descriptors: Deafness, Parents, Chinese, Language Usage
Stefano Presutti – International Journal of Multilingualism, 2024
In an increasingly globalised and multilingual world, the use of different scripts in the same semiotic landscape is an increasingly frequent and widespread phenomenon. For this reason, it is vital to conduct research focusing on multiscriptality in order to better understand the linguistic and semiotic functions of the use of multiple scripts…
Descriptors: Semiotics, Scripts, Alphabets, Slavic Languages