Learning American Sign Language in High School

Motivation, Strategies, and Achievement

1st Edition

By Russell S. Rosen

Categories: American Sign Language Reference and Instruction, American Sign Language Research
Imprint: Gallaudet University Press
Hardcover : 9781563686429, 208 pages, June 2015
Ebook : 9781563686436, 208 pages, June 2015
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This new book offers high school ASL teachers and program administrators concrete information on why students take ASL for foreign language credit, how they learn new signs and grammar, and how different learning techniques determines their achievement in ASL.

 
 

Description

Reflecting the exponential growth of college courses offering American Sign Language (ASL) as a foreign language, high schools have followed suit with significant increases in ASL classes during the past two decades. Despite this trend, high school ASL teachers and program administrators possess no concrete information on why students take ASL for foreign language credit, how they learn new signs and grammar, and how different learning techniques determines their achievement in ASL. This new book addresses these issues to better prepare high schools in their recruitment and education of new ASL students.

       Author Russell S. Rosen begins with the history of ASL as a foreign language in high schools, including debates about the foreign language status of ASL, the situation of deaf and hard of hearing students in classes, and governmental recognition of ASL as a language. Based on his study of five high school ASL programs, he defines the factors that motivate students, including community and culture, and analyzes strategies for promoting language processing and learning.  Learning American Sign Language in High School provides strategies for teaching ASL as a second language to students with learning disabilities as well. Its thorough approach ensures the best opportunity for high school students to attain high levels of achievement in learning ASL.

 

Russell S. Rosen is Coordinator, Program in the Teaching of American Sign Language as a Foreign Language, Teachers College, Columbia University, New York, NY.

 
 

Reviews

"The book is a rich mine of (the author's) findings in studies conducted with hearing students in high schools learning ASL—findings related to motivation, language processing, and learning strategies...Highly recommended."

— CHOICE

"As the number of ASL classes increases, so does our need to understand how factors like motivation, learning strategies, and learning disability affect learner success, and how these patterns compare with those from spoken L2 classrooms."

— Deborah Chen Pichler, Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education