She said she is already fluent in ASL in another thread.
shel90 - I am not talking about ASL, I am talking about English.
She said she is already fluent in ASL in another thread.
shel90 - I am not talking about ASL, I am talking about English.
shel90 - I am not talking about ASL, I am talking about English.
Can I ask which language you believe should be L1?That's fine. In my belief, it is important for children to develop a strong L1 language first so of course, I dont think about which language it is. That's now how I think.
“This critical examination of some of the most frequent claims made by supporters of bilingual-bicultural models of literacy education for deaf students questions the viability of these claims as sufficient foundation and basis for justifying the pedagogical argument. In raising this question our goal is not to argue that these claims are “right” or “wrong.” This would contribute little to an already prolonged debate and would pander to the fallacious notion that there is one “best” and only way to educate deaf children. Nor should this criticism be seen as the basis for making a general argument against bilingual education for deaf students. This is a point we made at the outset. However, if this approach to educating deaf children is to be seen as appropriate for the larger numbers of students, its tenets and theoretical foundations must be able to withstand close examination, and its proponents cannot conveniently ignore the current theory, knowledge, and research data that do not fit the model.”
Can I ask which language you believe should be L1?
My belief is ASL since it is fully accessible to deaf children cuz we never know how much access deaf children have with spoken language but if others want to argue with me about it, they dont have to adopt my beliefs. I have good reasons for believing the way I do.
Rockdrummer,
I understand your one size fits all. However, I'm curious as to what exactly do you want the doctors/audiologists to say to the parents who have no idea what to do for their deaf child? Ideally we want the parents to do their own research but this is not always or even mostly the case. Do you want the experts to tell the parents "Oh hey theres a whole buncha options, pick one!" giving the description of each method available but not really telling them which has a higher probability of being successful?
Oh and if it isn't obvious already, Im TOTALLY jumping into this thread without reading all the past posts (Im only on page 4 so far!)
Actually, I believe RD has been saying the opposite, that one size does NOT fit all. And I have been of the same opinion.
Your question is good, though -- how parents should determine what approach they should take with their child when a bunch of options are thrown at them. I've been saying all along that statistics shouldn't matter (or at least not be the sole factor in a decision) because those numbers do not necessarily apply to each individual (meaning one size does not fit all.) Had my parents listened to my audiologist, I would not have learned sign. Instead they went the opposite way -- I learned sign first, then speech shortly thereafter.
My mom went the opposite of what the doctor said.... and I did oral only.
So what can the doctor/audiologist say to the parents when they ask "So what do you recommend we do now?"
When it comes to "What is best for your child?" We don't know, and never will. However, this is a different question from "What is best as a recommendation to start with?" At the risk of offending people, I wouldn't be surprised if the parents of most people, who were unhappy with the way they were educated as a child, just followed the doctor's orders.