Language Acquisition By Eye

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american
AMERICAN Sign Language
American Sign Language studies
Asl Sign
babbling
Can
Canonical Babbling
Category=CFDC
Category=JMC
Category=JMR
Category=JNU
child
child language development
Chinese Brother
De Villiers
deaf
Deaf Children
deaf education research
Deaf Infants
Deaf Mothers
Deaf Parents
Deaf Students
early signed language and literacy development
eq_bestseller
eq_dictionaries-language-reference
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Face To Face
Fundamental Frequency
Hand Configuration
Hat
hearing
Hearing Infants
infants
JSL
languages
manual
Manual Babbles
Marginal Babbling
MCE
Nonverbal IQ
Prosodic Cues
Proximal Articulator
reading comprehension in deaf learners
sign
sign language acquisition
Vice Versa
visual communication in children
vocal
Vocal Babble

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138003071
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 12 Aug 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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This book focuses on the early acquisition of signed languages and the later development of reading by children who use signed languages. It represents the first collection of research papers focused solely on the acquisition of various signed languages by very young children--all of whom are acquiring signed languages natively, from deaf parents. It is also the first collection to investigate the possible relationships between the acquisition of signed language and reading development in school-aged children. The underlying questions addressed by the chapters are how visual-gestural languages develop and whether and how visual languages can serve the foundation for learning a second visual representation of language, namely, reading.

Language Acquisition by Eye is divided into two parts, anchored in the toddler phase and the school-pupil phase. The central focus of Part I is on the earliest stages of signed language acquisition. The chapters in this part address important questions as to what "babytalk" looks like in signed language and the effect it has on babies' attention, what early babbling looks like in signed language, what babies' earliest signs look like, how parents talk to their babies in signed language to ensure that their babies "see" what's being said, and what the earliest sentences in signed languages tell us about the acquisition of grammar. With contrasting research paradigms, these chapters all show the degree to which parents and babies are highly sensitive to one another's communicative interactions in subtle and complex ways. Such observations cannot be made for spoken language acquisition because speech does not require that the parent and child look at each other during communication whereas signed language does.

Part II focuses on the relationship between signed language acquisition and reading development in children who are deaf. All of these chapters report original research that investigates and uncovers a positive relationship between the acquisition and knowledge of signed language and the development of reading skills and as a result, represents a historical first in reading research. This section discusses how current theory applies to the case of deaf children's reading and presents new data that illuminates reading theory. Using a variety of research paradigms, each chapter finds a positive rather than a negative correlation between signed language knowledge and usage, and the development of reading skill. These chapters are sure to provide the foundation for new directions in reading research.

Jill P. Morford, Charlene Chamberlain, Rachel I. Mayberry