Image for A Family-Centered Signed Language Curriculum to Support Deaf Children's Language Acquisition

A Family-Centered Signed Language Curriculum to Support Deaf Children's Language Acquisition

Part of the Elements in Sign Languages series
See all formats and editions

Deaf children experience language deprivation at alarmingly high rates.

One contributing factor is that most are born to non-signing hearing parents who face insurmountable barriers to learning a signed language.

This Element presents a case for developing signed language curricula for hearing families with deaf children that are family-centered and focus on child-directed language.

Core vocabulary, functional sentences, and facilitative language techniques centered around common daily routines allow families to apply what they learn immediately.

Additionally, Deaf Community Cultural Wealth (DCCW) lessons build families' capacity to navigate the new terrain of raising a deaf child.

If early intervention programs serving the families of young deaf children incorporate this type of curriculum into their service delivery, survey data suggest that it is both effective and approachable for this target population, so the rates of language deprivation may decline.

Read More
Special order line: only available to educational & business accounts. Sign In
Product Details
Cambridge University Press
1009380737 / 9781009380737
eBook (Adobe Pdf)
419.019
16/08/2023
United Kingdom
English
75 pages
Copy: 10%; print: 10%
Description based on CIP data; resource not viewed.