I am simply stating the problems with the article.
I HAVE asked questions...look at some of the other posts. Yet no one seems to want to reply to them. Or if they do, the actual questions are skirted. When these questions are ignored I would assume it is because no one knows the answers or if they do, do not like the answers.
I do have a valid dissagreement with the post...it NEEDS more information...or a link to a place where more information is available. Instead I'm supposed to believe that this short article is ok. I've been able to find FULL articles on CS and ASL that demonstrate both the topics effectiveness, some of which have been posted here. I am not disagreeing about the topic, I was disagreeing with the way the material was presented. If it's a case study, I should still be able to access more of the information. The way it's presented in the article isn't enough and there is no additional information on how to access that extra information.
Honestly, your comments about my education are very unnecessary and quite dissrespectful.
While you may prefer more information, a long abstract is nothing more than a synopsis. It is intended as an introduction. If you wish to have further information, then you utilize the references. Abstracts are intended only to provide you with enough information to see if the entire study is something that would be beneficial to read, or if it is useful to access the article as well as other articles like it for your own research purposes. And the information to access the article as published was made available in the post.
There is a difference between qualitative research and quantitative research, as well as the way in which the results are presented. A case study is a qualitative study, but your objections apply to quantitave research designs. Perhaps, if you wish to reveiw the items you have listed, you would do well to look for quantitative studies that woud either support or refute the qualitative study contained in this report. One study does not contain the all of the answers to all of the questions. One must undertake to access a variety of studies, and not rely on one long abstract to do that. In short, this study complies with the guidelines for a qualitative study, and for the reporting of the results. Just because it doesn't answer all of your questions does not mean it is not valid, nor does that indicate problems within the research design.
Perhaps you feel that my comments about your education are unwarranted; however, you are the one that opened that door. You got off on the wrong foot by making accusations of presumptuousness when you had neither knwoledge of the topic nor of the posters to support your accusation.
Regarding your questions, I have answered any and all questions that you have asked that I have seen, and I have seen the posts of other memebers of this board that have answered your questions, as well.
But there is one question that you have failed to answer repreatedly: what year are you in your studies?
Another question that was asked, and not answered was, what is your connection to the deaf community?
These questions were asked because your posts immediately gave the impression that you were a new college student, and that you have no long term connection to the deaf community, nor any time spent studying deafness from an educational nor a sociological perspective. That is not a criticism....simply an observation. Everyone is a new student at some point, and everyone must start at the beginning. It is only annoying when someone who is at the beginning attempts to protray themselves as further down the road than they actually are. That is the way that you came across. Perhaps you should start over with a different approach.
Regarding your statement of "the problems with the article". it is obvious that you are simply repeating what you have learned in your psych 101 class regarding research, but have not learned the difference between qualitative and quantitative designs, and therefore, are applying what you have leaned incorrectly. I applaud you for trying to apply that which you are learning, but you also need to understand how much more you have to learn.