39
Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Language and the Deaf

April 11, 2012: Session 12Jessica Scott, Boston University

Page 2: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Food for Thought

“Language [can] be expressed . . . by movements of the hands and face just as well as by the small, sound-generating movements of the throat and mouth. Then the first criterion for language that I had learned as a student—it is spoken and heard—was wrong; and, more important, language did not depend on our ability to speak and hear but must be a more abstract capacity of the brain. It was the brain that had language, and if that capacity was blocked in one channel, it would emerge through another.”-Harlan Lane

Page 3: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Agenda

Discussion: TT

Classic Assessment

Dynamic Assessment

Break!

CI Corner

Applying Dynamic Assessment

Housekeeping

Page 4: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Goals for the Session

To understand the problems with assessment

To think about dynamic assessment, including its pro’s and con’s

To consider how dynamic assessment could be used with Deaf children

Page 5: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Agenda

Discussion: TT

Classic Assessment

Dynamic Assessment

Break!

CI Corner

Applying Dynamic Assessment

Housekeeping

Page 6: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Discussion!

Page 7: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Discussion Board Interlude

This phrase in this chapter, “Culturally different children have not fared well under the “melting pot” theory of education, which emphasized deficits rather than recognizing differences” (p. 137). People in general spend too much time looking for what is wrong with Deaf children instead of focusing on what is right with them. We need to spend time and energy promoting all the strengths and then build on them. Time spent on finding deficits is time wasted.

As we know, not everyone is a good test taker, but often, I think we mistaken children’s inabilities to test well for a variety of reasons other then their cultural background. Often students are being misplaced in classroom settings because they do not perform well on standardized test.

Page 8: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Agenda

Discussion: TT

Classic Assessment

Dynamic Assessment

Break!

CI Corner

Applying Dynamic Assessment

Housekeeping

Page 9: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Classic Assessment

Common assessment practices:

Formative assessment – what can the student do before instruction?

Summative assessment – what can the student do after instruction?

During assessment – No support given to students

This is not really reflection of instruction, where we modify what we do in response to students (mediation model!)

Page 10: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

When we’re assessing children, we often are thinking of them as having a problem.

Classic assessments often think of the problem as being situated in the child

Legitimization oriented assessment – we are finding what’s “wrong” with the child

But there is another perspective – that the problem is outside of the child in the environment

Advocacy oriented assessment – we are figuring out what in the environment is preventing the student from being successful

Where is the problem?

Page 11: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Testing Bias

Language bias (for speakers of non-standard English or other languages)

Academic language and vocabulary

Figurative language

Complex Syntax

Cultural/Content bias (When the content on the test does not match the curriculum – assumes general world knowledge that is culturally specific)

Page 12: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Testing Bias and Deaf Students

Obviously, the two main testing biases:

Language bias (for users of ASL) Trybus and Buchanan (1973) and concluded that the following

linguistic structures created more difficulty for deaf test takers than their hearing peers when matched for reading level: (a) conditionals (e.g., “if” clauses), (b) comparatives (e.g., “greater than, the most”), (c) negatives (e.g., “not, without, answer not given”), (d) inferentials (“should, could, because, since”), (e) low information pronouns (e.g., “it, something”), and (f) lengthy passages

Content/Cultural bias (for those that do not know hearing culture) Deaf students may have different world knowledge, because

of their different experience (Lollis & LaSasso, 2008)

Page 13: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

When looking for bias…

Conceptually, is the item a good one? (objective match, fair representation, lack of cultural bias, single problem, one best answer)

Linguistically, is the item appropriate? (age appropriate, lack of excess words; no stem/foil clues; and no negative in foils)

Is the format appropriate? (logical order of foils; print size and type, familiar presentation style; equal length in foils.)

Are diagrams (if used) appropriate? (necessity of the diagram, quality of the diagram, and unbiased nature of it)?

Which grade level is the passage appropriate?

For the grade level to which the passage is currently assigned, is it easy, medium, or hard?

Is the passage interesting to read and does it have a beginning, middle, and end?

Is the frame acceptable for the passage?

Do all the objectives fit well with the passage or should one or more not be used and substituted with another objective?

Do the items adequately cover the major content of the passage? Are the most important ideas included?

Page 14: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Examining a standardized test

In groups, look at the passage and questions from an MCAS Assessment

Is it fair to Deaf students… Linguistically?

Content-wise?

Culturally?

Page 15: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Agenda

Discussion: TT

Classic Assessment

Dynamic Assessment

Break!

CI Corner

Applying Dynamic Assessment

Housekeeping

Page 16: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Dynamic Assessment!

Process:

Assess – what can the student do on his or her own?

Assess – what can the student do with teacher support?

Instruction – based on both assessments

Assess – how has the student grown? What can they do with and without support?

This more closely resembles classroom instruction

Page 17: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Steps for Dynamic Assessment Process

1. Be a decision-maker: What does the student need? How are they struggling? What in the environment might be causing that?

2. Question placements from standardized tests: they are not always right

3. Trial teaching: move students upward from initial testing level until they hit a frustration level

4. Do not blindly follow labels: They can be wrong, and do not give you the most important information about that student

5. Be proactive: be a leader looking to help change the system for the better, don’t wait for someone else to come and change it for you

Page 18: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Steps for Dynamic Assessment Process

6. Understand the cultural norms of your students and establish classroom procedures that are congruent with those norms: Use students’ knowledge to their advantage

7. Support bilingualism: Address students in the language they know best and use this for instruction!

8. Teach in the ZPD: Children need you to meet them where they are AND provide them with challenge

9. Encourage peer collaboration: Children often learn best from one another

10. Encourage multiculturalism and interactions

Page 19: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Culturally diverse assessment

5 socio-cultural areas to consider in assessment:

Culture/linguistic background – What does the child know? What is their culture? Their language?

Experiential background – What has the student seen or done before?

Stage and pattern of acculturation – What does the student know about their own culture?

Patterns of sociolinguistic development and language transfer – What does the student know about the dominant culture? About their second language?

Cognitive learning styles – How does the student learn best?

Page 20: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

On the wiki

It was pointed out that there are some negatives to the DAP

Subjectivity

Lack of resources

Resistance from teachers

On the board, we will make a pros and cons list for dynamic assessment

Page 21: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Agenda

Discussion: TT

Classic Assessment

Dynamic Assessment

Break!

CI Corner

Applying Dynamic Assessment

Housekeeping

Page 22: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Break!

Page 23: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Agenda

Discussion: TT

Classic Assessment

Dynamic Assessment

Break!

CI Corner

Applying Dynamic Assessment

Housekeeping

Page 24: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

CI Corner

Great expectations: Perspectives on cochlear implantation of deaf children in Norway

By E. Simonsen, A. Kristoffersen, M.B. Hyde, O. Hjulstad

American Annals of the Deaf, 2009, Volume 154, Issue 3

Page 25: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Abstract THE AUTHORS DESCRIBE the use of cochlear implants

with deaf children in Norway and examine how this intervention has raised new expectations and some tensions concerning the nature of education for deaf students. They report on two studies of communication within school learning environments of young children with implants in Norwegian preschools and primary/elementary schools. These studies involved observations of classroom discourse and teaching activity and interviews with teachers, administrators, parents, and pupils. Results suggested varied patterns of use of Norwegian and of Norwegian Sign Language and several modes of communication, including speech alone, sign alone, and speech with sign. Conclusions are drawn regarding the reasons for the observed variations and the future impact of cochlear implantation on educational policies and services for deaf children and their families in Norway.

Page 26: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

What did they do?

24 Deaf children in Norway with CIs

Between 7 and 11

Some in bilingual schools, some in “special needs” programs, and others in local spoken language only schools

They observed in the schools and interviewed the teachers

Page 27: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

What did they find?

Teachers in bilingual programs were more driven by student needs when choosing the mode of communication

Teachers in spoken-language only programs were driven by external mandates when choosing the mode of communication

I find this problematic – children with cochlear implants should learn sign language, and it should be a resource even in a spoken-language setting, if the student doesn’t understand – language should be chosen based on the child’s needs, not the school’s rules.

Page 28: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

An important con

They call simultaneous communication “sign bilingual”

I felt this should not go unshared

However, I think it is important to think about the increased flexibility in meeting student needs that might come with a program that encourages the use of sign language

Any comments or questions on this article?

Page 29: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Agenda

Discussion: TT

Classic Assessment

Dynamic Assessment

Break!

CI Corner

Applying Dynamic Assessment

Housekeeping

Page 30: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

How can we assess ASL?

Think about the differences found between ASL and English in the storytelling article TT led us in discussing earlier

Because of the modality of language being different, the way ideas and thoughts are expressed is inherently different

So assessments we use to determine what’s “good” language output in English do not help us with ASL

Page 31: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

One Example: Writing Assessment

Ideas: Can the student write a piece in English that has a main idea or theme?

Organization: Does the writing have an internal structure, or thread? Is the sequence of ideas correct?

Voice: Is the writer’s unique perspective shown?

Word Choice: Does the author choose rich and colorful English vocabulary?

Sentence Fluency: Does the writing have rhythm or flow?

Conventions: Are spelling, grammar, punctuation correct?

Page 32: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

How might we assess an ASL story

(dynamically)? Consider…

What dynamic assessment looks like

What the article (and we) identified as important pieces of an ASL story

What you know about ASL

If you are working in Bob’s ASL Assessment lab, feel free to take inspiration from there

And think of the elements of an ASL story that are essential that we would want to assess – and a way to assess them

You can pick age/grade level Goal: To create a checklist or some kind of rubric

Page 33: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Sharing

What did your groups come up with?

Page 34: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Applying

We will now watch a video of one of my former students

“Cara McElfresh, a student at East High School and ASSDHH, created an ABC story using Ashley Fiolek's name forward and backward. Ashley Fiolek is a motocross champion. This poetry was submitted to the MJP ASL literature competition and was a finalist.”

As you watch, think about your assessment checklist/rubric you created with your group

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XGN0XPOACh8&feature=share

Page 35: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

What do you think?

In groups, discuss:

Any adjustments you would make to your rubric

Where you think it does a good job capturing ASL storytelling

Where this student would score on the rubric

Page 36: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Agenda

Discussion: TT

Classic Assessment

Dynamic Assessment

Break!

CI Corner

Applying Dynamic Assessment

Housekeeping

Page 37: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

Next week…

Is a Monday schedule

But since I didn’t know that, there is reading on the rubric anyway

It is more on assessment

There will be a discussion board on the wiki and I encourage you to talk over ideas there, since we will not be together in person to do so

Page 38: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

The NEXT week…

April 25, is when we will see each other again

(It is also our penultimate class! Crazy!)

The topic will be reading research completed with Deaf students

Dana will be our discussion leader

AND we will have our final guest speaker, Erika Guarino

Remember to come prepared with questions about teaching in a self-contained environment

Page 39: Language and the Deaf April 11, 2012: Session 12 Jessica Scott, Boston University

See you in two weeks!