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Nov 21, 2024
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2024-2025 College Catalog
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ASL 203 - Comparative Analysis of ASL and English 3 Credits, 3 Contact Hours 3 lecture periods 0 lab periods Enhanced study of the fundamental principles and cognitive processing of American Sign Language. Includes a further study of the Deaf community and Deaf culture.
Prerequisite(s): ASL 201 with a grade of B or better, and WRT 102 . Information: This course is recommended for students who have finished ASL 202 or ASL departmental approval and desire further study and review. Students may be expected to attend outside events at their own expense. Gen-Ed: Meets AGEC - Options and C
Course Learning Outcomes
- Discuss the role of classifiers in American Sign Language (ASL).
- Discuss the linguistic aspects of verb modulation/inflection.
- Explain the functions of eye-indexing, pronominalization, compounding, contracting, sign space referents, facial grammar, relative clauses and conjunctions.
- List three critical components of language.
- Diagram and describe the sign language continuum of manually coded English, Rochester Method, American Sign Language, Pidgin Sign Language, and oral.
- Discuss basic comparisons between ASL and English semantics, morphology, phonology, and syntax.
- Discuss ASL as a living language including historical changes of ASL, current trends, and future predictions.
- Read, write, and explain the role of basic gloss transcription.
- Produce an ASL research paper demonstrating necessary research writing skills using an approved discipline related style format.
Outline:
- History of American Sign Language (ASL)
- Language Requirements
- Linguistic Fields
- Communication Systems
- Animal Communication
- Assimilation/Symmetry Principles
- American Sign Language/English Comparisons
- Time/Tense Indicators
- Semantics
- Morphology
- Syntax
- Phonology
- Facial Grammar
- Sign Space
- Modulation/Inflection
- Classifiers/ SASSes
- Conjunctions
- Relative Clauses
- Reality Principle
- Conversational Regulators
- ASL Research Topics
- Gloss/Transcription
- Current Issues
- Linguistic Research Paper
Effective Term: Spring 2017
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