Teacherofthedeaf
Active Member
- Joined
- Oct 5, 2016
- Messages
- 486
- Reaction score
- 63
You have not, in fact, provided me with any research that says what you claim. The first paper you have linked to is a case study about one oral deaf child being signed a story and whether or not that child understood in ASL or signed English better. The child wasn't even a signed language user.@Teacherofthedeaf "I also never said that children cannot think using ASL. " Yes you did. You said that "without the use of sign language " you teach children to "think, learn, speak, etc." so that they can "be at the level of hearing children". You keep harping on that only speech and listening are ways to be at the intellectual and academic level of hearing children, which you are saying is much higher than Deaf children who don't speak. I went to grad school too (this stupid girl who signs) and I'm sure you learned basic logic. When you are saying all these things you are also attesting to a belief in the converse, in this case, that Deaf children who use sign language instead of speech are NOT competitive with hearing children and who will not be at their academic level. A little school called Gallaudet would think otherwise. You have heard of it right? I mean they only use ASL on campus so you might not have.
As far as research I have provided study after study. You keep countering with "research from our school says". You realize that's not valid right. Your school has a vested interest in proving that forcing Deaf children to speak and "hear" (I bet you believe you can force paraplegics to 'walk' and blind kids to 'see' too, but that's a different point all together) You're also using a small sample group with no control. It's not statistically valid, if anything it's anecdotal evidence... at best.
Here's more evidence, using proper studies, statistics and a wide variety of sources attesting to the validity of the points discussed. (Also to clarify, in all these "sign language" means an actual complete sign language like ASL or BSL NOT signed English, SEE 1, SEE 2 ,etc.)
http://www.deafed.net/publisheddocs/sub/970723e.htm
This is a great document incorporating numerous studies to explain the benefit of sign language as a Deaf child's first language. It also discusses how ASL is considered a real natural language from a linguistic standpoint while SE, SEE 1 and SEE 2 are consciously designed systems and inferior from a language acquisition standpoint.
http://www.ucl.ac.uk/dcal/dcal-news/early-sign-expos
"The study showed that adults who developed sign language skills from birth had better grammatical judgement in BSL. Adults who reported learning BSL from the ages of 2 to 8 years found it harder to acquire the same language skills. The research has highlighted that learning both a sign language and a spoken or written language will be the most beneficial for children to make the most of their linguistic abilities.
A bilingual approach can maximise linguistic and cognitive skills to overcome any delays or difficulties due to deafness. The advantages of early sign language exposure in particular remain clear even with rapid advances in hearing aids and cochlear implants"
aka a bi-bi education that I've been advocating
https://www.researchgate.net/public...e_for_the_deaf_students_in_classroom_learning
"The study showed that sign language is significantly beneficial language instrument for deaf students in classroom learning.
continued...
The second was a survey sent to a few teachers in one school about how benifical sign was in their classrooms. I am 100% sure that sign was benefitical in their classrooms. Why wouldn't it have been?
And our longitudinal data is important. It shows that our students are catching up and staying caught up. That is important because it shows that what we are doing is working.