ASL I Review ASL II 1st 6 weeks
What are the Parameters of ASL? P – Palm Orientation H - Handshape E - Expressions L - Location M - Movement
Palm Orientation Which way your palm should face Up Down out in Left Right Example: Table or Baby?
Handshape Shapes of your hands (using the alphabet and numbers to sign) Confused hand shapes – 1/D, D/F, E/O Example: I am Rita vs. My Rita
Facial Expression Head nods/shakes, eyebrows, nose, eyes, and lips each carry a meaning that can be attached to a sign. Example:
Location Begin and end your sign at the correct position Signs are directional and originate away from the body but end close, or begin close to the body and terminate away Example: I’ll see you tomorrow
Movement Types Arc Straight line Circle Alternating in and out Twist of the wrist Finger flick
Changes in Movement Location change – one or both hand(s) move from one location to another
Changes in Movement Direction change – one or both hand(s) change direction
Change in Movement Hand shape change – one or both hand(s) change hand shape in mid-sign
American Sign Language Is not universal Is not English There are several different sign languages but only ASL is the REAL language. Native language of the North American Deaf population.
6 different sign languages: Non-verbal Communication In-group signs ASL PSE (Pidgin Sign English) Manual English (SEE 1, SEE 2, LOVE) Rochester Method
Non-verbal communication Natural gestures Facial expressions Body movement Used internationally Used when common language is not available
In-group signs Home signs School Signs Local Signs Signs are unique to a particular group or family Examples: football, baseball, gang, subway
ASL Standard Signs Finger spelling elements of pantomime Syntax of its own Ideographic Visual language that is conceptually accurate. Example: I went to the store yesterday is signed as YESTERDAY I GO STORE.
PSE (Pidgin Sign English) Standard Signs Contact language between English and ASL (Hearing and Deaf) 3 guidelines followed; ASL in English word order using articles and verb tenses is optional noun plurality is deleted. Example: I went to the store yesterday is signed and mouthed as I GO STORE YESTERDAY
Manual English SEE 1 Seeing Essential English: Used in Amarillo and sometimes in Richardson, TX (Amarillo sign System) One-on-One correlation for changing sound to hand movement. Uses initialized signs visual code for Manual English Example: comfortable, forgetfulness
Manual English SEE 2 Signing Exact English one sign for each morpheme in English Example: I went to the store yesterday is signed as I GO + ED TO THE STORE YESTERDAY.
Manual English LOVE Linguistics of Visual English Deaf morphemic language that is/was not conceptually accurate. Example: I went to the store yesterday is signed as I GO + ED TO THE STORE YESTER + DAY.
Rochester Method Used when a word needs to be expressed but no sign is available. Finger spell every single word. Example: I went to the store yesterday is signed as I W-E-N-T T-O T-H-E S-T-O-R-E Y-E-S-T-E-R-D-A-Y.