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1
The emergence of combinatorial structure in Zinacantec family homesign
BASE
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2
Enhanced gaze-following behavior in Deaf infants of Deaf parents
In: Dev Sci (2019)
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3
Ethics, deaf-friendly research, and good practice : when studying sign languages
In: Research methods in sign language studies (Chichester, 2015), p. 7-20
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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4
Studying sign language disorders : considering neuropsychological data
In: Research methods in sign language studies (Chichester, 2015), p. 336-351
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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5
Research methods in sign language studies : a practical guide
Martin, Amber J.; Johnston, Trevor; Palmer, Jeffrey Levi. - Chichester : John Wiley, 2015. Chichester : Wiley Blackwell, 2015
BLLDB
UB Frankfurt Linguistik
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6
Atypical signed language development: A case study of challenges with visualspatial processing
In: Cognitive neuropsychology. - Abingdon : Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group 30 (2013) 5, 332-359
OLC Linguistik
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7
A cross-cultural and cross-linguistic analysis of deaf reading practices in China: case studies using teacher interviews and classroom observations
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8
Teachers' perceptions of the use of ASL phonological instruction to develop ASL and English literacy in an ASL/English bilingual preschool
Crume, Peter. - 2011
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9
Developmental social cognitive neuroscience: insights from deafness
In: Child development. - Malden, Ma. [u.a.] : Blackwell 80 (2009) 4, 952-967
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10
Education at last! Taiwanese grandmothers "go to school"
Lin, Shumin. - 2009
Abstract: Language socialization is a life-long process in which individuals are continuously socialized into new roles, statuses, and practices. This process becomes more complex in multilingual contexts. However, we know little of the language socialization of older adults and we know even less of minority-speaking elders' experiences of linguistic marginalization in contemporary communicative milieus. In this ethnographic and discourse-analytic study, I examine the language socialization of non-Mandarin-speaking elderly Taiwanese women in senior adult education programs in a rural township in Taiwan. Through examining autobiographical narratives, master narratives about elders, and classroom discourses, this study explores the historical construction of their sociolinguistic marginalization and their negotiation and resistance of such marginalization. The majority of the elderly women were denied education when they were young. Some received Japanese education during the Japanese colonization period. While the uneducated and illiterate elders have a strong aspiration for learning, they are dismissed as "unable to learn" by their teachers, peer students, and community leaders. By contrast, the Japanese literate exhibit a strong learning identity associated with colonial modernity. These two groups, however, have to contend with the social stereotype associated with their non-Mandarin speaking status. Under a Mandarin-only ideology that links Mandarin with modernity, discourses that have actively mobilized the category of “illiterate” to reference the older population are part and parcel of Taiwan’s modern identity. By demonstrating how these women are treated, in official discourses and in classroom interactions, as children for their lack of Mandarin abilities, I argue that the literacy education that set out to “compensate” these women for their earlier lack of educational opportunity has paradoxically reinforced their marginalization. Further, in recent years, they have become even more marginalized as the government has prioritized the education of recent young female marriage immigrants from Southeast Asia, who are considered in charge of educating the “future sons and daughters of Taiwan.” This research demonstrates how language socialization is a contested and life-long process and calls attention to the effects of language ideologies on literacy and language education. The findings have policy implications for improving literacy and language education both within Taiwan and elsewhere in the world.
Keyword: identity; Language ideology; Language Socialization; senior adult education; sociolinguistic marginalization; Taiwan
URL: http://hdl.handle.net/2142/14746
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11
Natural signed language acquisition within the social context of the classroom
In: Advances in the sign-language development of deaf children (Oxford, 2006), p. 344-376
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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12
When learners surpass their models: the acquisition of American Sign Language from inconsistent input
In: Cognitive psychology. - Amsterdam : Elsevier 49 (2004) 4, 370-407
BLLDB
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13
Vocabulary Use by Low, Moderate, and High ASL-Proficient Writers Compared to Hearing ESL and Monolingual Speakers
Singleton, Jenny L.; Morgan, Dianne; DiGello, Elizabeth. - : Oxford University Press, 2004
BASE
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14
Assessing children's proficiency in natural signed languages
In: Oxford handbook of deaf studies, language, and education (Oxford, 2003), p. 289-304
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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15
ASL proficiency and English literacy acquisition : new perspectives
Prinz, Philip M. (Hrsg.); Kuntze, Marlon (Mitarb.); Singleton, Jenny L. (Mitarb.)...
In: Topics in language disorders. - Hagerstown, Md. : Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 18 (1998) 4, III-VII, 1-88
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16
From Sign to Word: Considering Modality Constraints in ASL-English Bilingual Education
In: Topics in language disorders. - Hagerstown, Md. : Lippincott Williams & Wilkins 18 (1998) 4, 16-29
OLC Linguistik
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17
Silence is liberating : removing the handcuffs on grammatical expression in the manual modality
In: Psychological review. - Washington, DC [u.a.] : American Psychological Association 103 (1996) 1, 34-55
BLLDB
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18
Frome homesign to ASL : identifying the influence of a self-generated childhood gesture system upon language proficiency in adulthood
In: Proceedings of the ... annual Boston University Conference on Language Development (Somerville, Mass), 19.2 ; p. 403-414
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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19
The cataclysmic break between gesticulation and sign : evidence against a unified continuum of gestural communication
In: Language, gesture, and space (Hillsdale, NJ, 1995), p. 287-312
MPI für Psycholinguistik
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20
From Homesign to ASL : identifying the influences of a self-generated childhood gesture system upon language proficiency in adulthood
In: Conference on Language Development <19, 1994, Boston, Mass.>. Proceedings of the 19th Annual Boston University Conference on Language Development ; 2. - Somerville, Mass. : Cascadilla Press (1995), 403-414
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