Seminar: 4 hours per week
Class activities may include lecture and language lab, demonstration/modelling, dialogue and small group conversational practice, course readings, videos, and shadowing language models, among others.
Sentence structures, vocabulary and narrative techniques:
- Non-manual markers made with the mouth
- Rhetorical questions
- Relative clauses
- Use of left/right space for comparisons
- Constructed dialogue and constructed action
- Time/tense markers and use of timelines
- Discourse genres: instructional, argumentative, informational, expository & persuasive
- 7 expansion/contextualization techniques
Building knowledge of ASL’s numbering systems:
- Variations in context-specific ordinal number formats
- Variations in context-specific cardinal number formats
- Money-related numbers and vocabulary
Narrating about major decisions, accidents, money management:
- Discourse markers for sequencing, comparing, explaining
- Related verbs and other vocabulary
- Sharing and giving opinions
Introduction to Deaf advocacy organizations and events:
- Local, provincial, national, international
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to:
- Demonstrate intermediate-advanced ASL narration skills to do the following:
- Incorporate appropriate use of non-manual markers in signed utterances
- Use appropriate register when sharing and giving opinion
- Construct cohesive narrative discourse with appropriate discourse markers and pauses for topic transition/maintenance
- Appropriately incorporate the narrative techniques of constructed dialogue and constructed action
- Use a wide variety of classifiers and locatives
- Use appropriate number formats for particular contexts
- Maintain appropriate temporal aspect and use time/tense markers
- Analyze and diagram ASL texts to determine main points and supporting detail
- Identify the 7 techniques for expansion/contextualization in ASL
- Reconstruct ASL texts working from one’s own discourse map
- Demonstrate versatility to produce ASL discourse in different genres
This course will conform to the ÌÇÐÄvlog´«Ã½Evaluation policy regarding the number and weighting of evaluations. Typical means of evaluation may include a combination of:
- Quizzes to evaluate factual knowledge of ASL & Deaf culture
- Quizzes to evaluate receptive ASL skills
- Demonstration of expressive ASL skills
- Assigned dialogues and interaction
- Attendance and participation
A sample grade breakdown for this course might be as follows:
Video assignment 1: 20%
Video assignment 2: 20%
Mid-term exam 1: 20%
Mid-term exam 2: 20%
Final exam: 20%
Total: 100%
No single assignment will be worth more than 20%.
The instructor might choose an ASL textbook such as:
Smith, Cheri. (2008). Signing Naturally 3. Student Workbook. San Diego, CA: DawnSignPress.
MODL 2163 or Assessment