SIGN AND SCHOOL

J. Kyle
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Abstract

When our international collection of papers on the status of signing in school was published in 1987, we believed we were in transition in the UK. The discovery of sign languages and their validation by linguists, had provided the base for the implementation which the deaf community had requested. Deaf children ought to have sign language as their language of interaction and instruction. The collection highlighted forward thinking but also showed that different countries were at different stages of their journey. In this contribution, we reflect on the knowledge we had then, the discoveries since, and ask the question: is it now the norm that deaf children, from the earliest of age, have access to sign language (in our case, British Sign Language), and can we describe the evidence that says this is working to produce more adjusted and effective citizens? We look beyond the simple question to consider whether the bilingualism we have been advocating is one-sided and does not produce a change in attitude for the majority society. In effect, if deaf people become bilingual, does it allow society to remain monolingual and to avoid engagement with the deaf view of life and society? And finally, the paper asks: what will be hearing loss or/and hearing enhancement in future?
标志与学校
1987年,当我们关于学校手语现状的国际文集出版时,我们认为英国正处于转型时期。手语的发现和语言学家对手语的验证,为聋人社区所要求的实施提供了基础。聋哑儿童应该用手语作为他们交流和指导的语言。该系列突出了前瞻性思维,但也显示了不同国家在其发展历程中的不同阶段。在这篇文章中,我们反思了我们当时所拥有的知识,以及后来的发现,并提出了这样一个问题:聋哑儿童从最早的年龄开始接触手语(在我们的例子中是英国手语),这是现在的常态吗?我们能否描述证据表明,这正在培养出更适应环境、更有效的公民?我们要超越这个简单的问题,考虑我们一直提倡的双语制度是否片面,并没有改变大多数社会的态度。实际上,如果聋人成为双语者,是否允许社会保持单语,并避免与聋人的人生观和社会观接触?最后,论文提出了一个问题:未来的听力损失或/和听力增强是什么?
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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