Longitudinal Receptive American Sign Language Skills Across a Diverse Deaf Student Body

This article presents results of a longitudinal study of receptive American Sign Language (ASL) skills for a large portion of the student body at a residential school for the deaf across four consecutive years. Scores were analyzed by age, gender, parental hearing status, years attending the residen...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of deaf studies and deaf education 2016-04, Vol.21 (2), p.200-212
1. Verfasser: Beal-Alvarez, Jennifer S.
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:This article presents results of a longitudinal study of receptive American Sign Language (ASL) skills for a large portion of the student body at a residential school for the deaf across four consecutive years. Scores were analyzed by age, gender, parental hearing status, years attending the residential school, and presence of a disability (i.e., deaf with a disability). Years 1 through 4 included the ASL Receptive Skills Test (ASL-RST); Years 2 through 4 also included the Receptive Test of ASL (RT-ASL). Student performance for both measures positively correlated with age; deaf students with deaf parents scored higher than their same-age peers with hearing parents in some instances but not others; and those with a documented disability tended to score lower than their peers without disabilities. These results provide longitudinal findings across a diverse segment of the deaf/hard of hearing residential school population.
ISSN:1081-4159
1465-7325
DOI:10.1093/deafed/enw002