Path: utzoo!utgpu!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!rpi!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!think.com!yale!bunker!hcap!hnews!300!14!James.Womack From: James.Womack@f14.n300.z1.fidonet.org (James Womack) Newsgroups: misc.handicap Subject: Dr. Supalla 3 Message-ID: <18719@bunker.isc-br.com> Date: 15 Apr 91 04:21:05 GMT Sender: wtm@bunker.isc-br.com Reply-To: James.Womack@f14.n300.z1.fidonet.org Organization: FidoNet node 1:300/14 - The Emerald Isle, Tucson AZ Lines: 48 Approved: wtm@bunker.hcap.fidonet.org Index Number: 14874 [This is from the Silent Talk Conference] At the University of Arizona where I work, approximately 500 students a semester pass through my program to learn ASL as a second language. Ten years ago no classes were offered. Now universities across the country have adopted the study of ASL as equivalent to the study of a foreign language in fulfilling the requirements of foreign language study for graduation. Times have really changed! Interestingly enough the number of hearing students taking ASL classes across the country has continued to increase and increase to the point that the number of hearing students studying ASL now outnumbers the number of deaf people who use ASL! Now ASDB, like many other schools throughout the country, is discussing the use of ASL in its pr ogram. Now let's focus on MCE (Manually Coded English). Has MCE accomplished what it set out to do? That is the question I wanted to answer when I began my research 5 years ago. There were many questions about MCE that I wanted to find the answer s for when I began my research. I will share what I found with you and you can decide how this information relates to ASDB and what ASDB wants to do in the future. There are four different versions of MCE: SEE 1, SEE 2, LOVE and Signed English. SEE 2 is the most commonly used version particularly in mainstream programs. Residential schools typically use a version similar to Signed English. My research focused on SEE 2. SEE 2 was developed as a way of representing English in a visual/gestural mode to facilitate the development of English skills in deaf children since the oral method was not producing the results that educators had wanted. It was thought that if English were encoded in a visual/gestural mode, a deaf child would be able to develop English as a first language. Just as a hearing child develops English as a first language through audition and a deaf child of deaf parents learns ASL as a first language visually, MCE would provide an opportunity to learn English as a first language by presenting it in a visual/gestural mode. This idea was a very exciting one and as a result, the use of SEE 2 spread throug hout the country after 1970. Since then the field of deaf education has essentially been involved in a twenty year experiment. Can MCE help deaf children acquire English? -- Uucp: ..!{decvax,oliveb}!bunker!hcap!hnews!300!14!James.Womack Internet: James.Womack@f14.n300.z1.fidonet.org