Language and the Deaf

37
Language and the Deaf Session 8, March 7, 2012 Jessica Scott Boston University

description

Language and the Deaf. Session 8, March 7, 2012 Jessica Scott Boston University. Food for Thought. Watch me when people say deaf and dumb, or deaf mute, and I give them a look like you might get if you called Denzel Washington the wrong name. Marlee Matlin. Agenda. Discussion - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Language and the Deaf

Page 1: Language and the Deaf

Language and the DeafSession 8, March 7, 2012

Jessica Scott

Boston University

Page 2: Language and the Deaf

Food for Thought

Watch me when people say deaf and dumb, or deaf mute, and I give them a look like you might get if you called Denzel Washington the wrong name. Marlee Matlin

Page 3: Language and the Deaf

Agenda

Discussion Vygotsky and instruction Break CI Corner Practice: Applying Vygotsky to the classroom Housekeeping

Page 4: Language and the Deaf

Goals for the Session

To understand the connection between Vygotsky and the Whole Language approach to teaching

To consider the role that social interaction plays in developing literacy skills

To apply these concepts to a classroom with Deaf students who use ASL

Page 5: Language and the Deaf

Agenda

Discussion

Vygotsky and instruction Break CI Corner Practice: Applying Vygotsky to the classroom Housekeeping

Page 6: Language and the Deaf

Discussion! The basic idea of whole language instruction is that students

should be immersed in literacy in meaningful ways. What might this look like?

Why is play important for a child’s development? How is this related to the idea of social transaction?

What might a whole language to teach English literacy skills to Deaf students look like?

Why are the concepts of invention and convention important for language development?

Page 7: Language and the Deaf

Discussion!

“Instead of adjusting school to the learners, we require the learners to adjust to the school.” (p. 234). Responses to this? How can we adjust school to fit the needs of the learners?

What do you think of the two classrooms described on page 237?

How can we find ways to empower students who are traditionally not well served by the educational system using whole language? Including, but not limited to, Deaf students.

Page 8: Language and the Deaf

Discussion board interlude

"What the child can do in cooperation today he can do alone tomorrow. therefore the only good kind on instruction is that which marches ahead of development and leads it; it must be aimed not so much at the ripe but as at the ripening functions" (Vygotsky 1962). ---I really liked those quote. It makes perfect sense. We need to teach children skills that they can later carry out themselves individually. This idea is important for children to be self learners.

Page 9: Language and the Deaf

The article on the other hand discusses this idea of "whole language". It seems as though the United States is lacking in this area of "whole language" learning. This concept draws on all foundational disciplines, but yet the US is too curriculum driven to be up to par with this.

As for the article, whole-language is a teaching style that I remembered from before I came here to BU. I distinctly remember two of my professors telling me that the this approach lead to the reading failure of many students simply because it didn't stress, or even specifically teach, phonics. Of course now I am not in a program in which phonics would be a helpful way to teach reading, so I think that I will stick with a whole-language approach.

Page 10: Language and the Deaf

Agenda

Discussion Vygotsky and instruction

Break CI Corner Practice: Applying Vygotsky to the classroom Housekeeping

Page 11: Language and the Deaf

Important Vygotskian Ideas

Zone of proximal development: Teaching students something that is just above their independent ability level. Used in guided reading (texts should be at a level that is in the students’ ZPD)

Teacher support in the ZPD should depend on student ability and needs (more or less support can be provided)

Support is meant to guide students to learning and becoming more independent in the activity they are attempting

Page 12: Language and the Deaf

Important Vygotskian Ideas

Social transaction: Students learn best when interacting with others

Schema: The way learners organize concepts. As students learn new things, they must reorganize or adapt their schema

Do you believe that ZPD, social transaction and schema are easily applied to Deaf students? Why or why not?

Page 13: Language and the Deaf

What is the role of the teacher?

To create opportunities for learning and experience To guide and support students in exploring, making

mistakes, and learning from them To watch children and learn from them what they are

ready for

Page 14: Language and the Deaf

Development and Vygotsky

Children develop through social interaction with others Through social interactions, students begin to

internalize what they have learned (i.e., reading behaviors) until they are able to apply these independently

Concepts are organized by increasingly advanced mental categorizations (heaps, complexes, potential concepts and genuine concepts) Concept webs can be a visual way to organize these

categories

Page 15: Language and the Deaf

Conceptual Categories

Page 16: Language and the Deaf

Behaviorism versus ConstructivismBehaviorism Children learn from

stimulus-response (positive reinforcements)

Children are passive in their learning

Children copy what they hear or see in their environment

Constructivism Children learn from

experimentation with ideas and objects

Children are active constructors of knowledge

The teacher learns from the child as the child learns from the teacher

Page 17: Language and the Deaf

Vygotsky and Reading

Children are guided by a teacher to develop print knowledge as they are ready for it (ZPD)

This begins with learning about what books are for, how to hold them, concepts of print, and continues to decoding, sight word recognition, and comprehension

Page 18: Language and the Deaf

Mediation Model of Reading Instruction

Page 19: Language and the Deaf

So…

Children need to engage in social experiences around literacy

We must model what we expect students to internalize

We must give students the opportunity to practice

Page 20: Language and the Deaf

What did you think of the examples?

With a partner or two, look over the two teaching examples on pages 22-24 What did you think about how the teacher prompted the

student? Do you think this type of instruction would be helpful for

the student? How can you see this playing out in a classroom with Deaf

students?

Page 21: Language and the Deaf

Steps in the Mediation Model

1: Rehearsal of new text Go through the text with the child, consider what he/she

needs to know to understand the story Familiarize the student with the story What strategies will be helpful? Reflect on how students respond to the introduction

2: Assisted Reading Model fluent reading – by signing the story in ASL and

occasionally referring to important parts of the text Guide students in their reading

Page 22: Language and the Deaf

Mediating Writing

Language Experience Approach: Teacher writes down children’s ideas in a whole class setting

Innovating: Using a text children know to make up their own stories in the same style or pattern

Individual writing: Students have the opportunity to explore writing independently

Page 23: Language and the Deaf

Discussion

This book provides many ideas for social interaction in teaching and learning Text rehearsing, assisted reading, language experience

approach

Do you think there are any modifications that would need to be made for a Deaf Education classroom using ASL? In terms of approach? In terms of interaction? In terms of language use?

Page 24: Language and the Deaf

Agenda

Discussion Vygotsky and instruction Break

CI Corner Practice: Applying Vygotsky to the classroom Housekeeping

Page 25: Language and the Deaf

Break!

Page 26: Language and the Deaf

Agenda

Discussion Vygotsky and instruction Break CI Corner

Practice: Applying Vygotsky to the classroom Housekeeping

Page 27: Language and the Deaf

CI Corner

Cochlear implants in prelingually deaf children By Rose, Vernon and Pool American Annals of the Deaf, 1996 Two authors are audiologists, one is a psychologist

Page 28: Language and the Deaf

CI Corner

What did they do? Surveyed all schools for the deaf with at least 100

students about student CI usage They identified 64 schools, and 45 of them completed the

survey The schools reported having 151 children who had

cochlear implants Remember, this is 1996..

Page 29: Language and the Deaf

CI Corner

What did they find? Almost half (47%) of the children had stopped using their

CIs Which supports the case for bilingual early intervention

among children with CIs, as these children who do not use them use ASL

Do you think these findings would be the same today? (15 years later!)

Page 30: Language and the Deaf

Agenda

Discussion Vygotsky and instruction Break CI Corner Practice: Applying Vygotsky to the classroom

Housekeeping

Page 31: Language and the Deaf

Practice: Vygotsky in Action

This book provides several examples of Vygotsky’s theories applied to the classroom

In groups of three, you will look at one example in depth and consider: How is interaction important in this example? How is the teacher supporting student learning? What about this example is a good fit for Deaf students? What about this example might need to be modified for

Deaf students?

Page 32: Language and the Deaf

Practice: Vygotsky In Action

The three examples are: Rehearsal Illustration (29-30) Assisted Shared Reading Illustration (34-36) Shared Writing Experience Illustration (38-39)

You will have 15-20 minutes to explore this example in detail with your group, and then we will discuss them as a whole class

Page 33: Language and the Deaf

Agenda

Discussion Vygotsky and instruction Break CI Corner Practice: Applying Vygotsky to the classroom Housekeeping

Page 34: Language and the Deaf

Annotated Bibliography

Due March 28 5 readings on the topic of your final paper 300 word (or less) commentary describing each

reading and how it applies to your final paper In APA format!

The rubric is in the syllabus!

Page 35: Language and the Deaf

Reminders

Proposal due between March 21 (the next day we meet) and April 11

Also, does anyone have a paper copy of their second essay to turn in?

Page 36: Language and the Deaf

Next class session

We will be talking about the development of literate thought

Betsy will be leading the class discussion We MIGHT have our second guest speaker, an ASL

specialist from The Learning Center But this is not completely confirmed yet.

Page 37: Language and the Deaf

Have a great spring break!!