Question:
Dr. Bill,
What is your opinion on speaking during
class?
--Steve
Answer:
I believe in a
bilingual/bicultural/multi-modal approach to ASL instruction. Personally I
teach "no-voice." I think that ASL instructors need to be cultural role
models and remember that in Deaf Culture signing is celebrated,
voicing is not.
Voicing can either be a crutch or it can be a tool. Too
often it takes the place of skillful voice-off instruction.
There are many successful ASL instructors who don't voice in the
classroom at all--ever. They have invested the time, energy, and
resources necessary to provide effective no-voice instruction.
"No-voice" instruction and "no-native-language"
instruction are two different things. For example, writing the word
"cheese" in English on the blackboard then demonstrating the sign
CHEESE is not the same as holding up a block of cheese and signing,
"CHEESE."
Carrying a block of cheese to class isn't exactly convenient (see my other
discussions regarding technology though).
Adult or young-adult second language learners already have a language
foundation. To ignore that foundation-- or pretend it doesn't
exist--is silly.
We have to consider the question: How can an instructor make the
best use of a student's native (English or other) language to support
ASL instruction--while making sure that the student does as much actual
signing as possible?"
Talking about ASL is not the same as
signing ASL. Students who go to class and hear about ASL do not sign
as well as students who go to class and use ASL to negotiate
meaning. On the other hand you can say the word "God"
or the word "love" in your native language and then show you the
sign a heck of a lot faster than you can "mime out" the concept of
"love" or "God" before showing it to you.
There are tradeoffs: Comfort level, frustration, drop out rates,
skill level, etc.
Telling a student what a sign means saves time and expedites
"vocabulary development" (which is to say the student learns lots of signs
quickly) but doesn't do much for his "visual-receptive decoding"
skills (which is to say he can't figure out a signed sentence to save
his life).
Think about this question, "At the end of a class with an initial
enrollment of 30 students, is it better to have 20 really good signers and
10 drop outs; or is it better to have 30 mederately good signers?" What
if you teach a student lots of signs via voicing during the first
few class sessions then you turn off your voice and require them to
sign and respond to questions using that vocabulary?
Obviously there is no cut and dried best answer-- and there will much variation in
every class--but the concept is clear: The more challenging you make a
class, the fewer students that can handle it. A total no-voice class is more
challenging than a voiced class.
It takes time, heat, and pressure to produce diamonds from coal. The
more heat and pressure you apply, the less time it takes.
Students are not
lumps of coal, if you apply lots of heat and pressure, some of them will
deal with it, do extra homework, pay attention more, and become great
signers. Others however will simply drop out.
It may be tempting to simply say, "Great! Let's get rid of the
deadwood!" But that is pie in the sky thinking. In the real
world, administrators become concerned when they see high dropout rates
because it's warm bodies in seats that pays the bills and pays your
salary. At the high school level you end up with an irate mom or dad
wanting to know why you are being so inflexible with their student.
Plus, it is no fun when a student drops your class.
If you decide to teach a no-voice class either by choice
(cultural respect) or by necessity (you are d/Deaf),
my suggestion is to make sure you do your homework. Prepare plenty
of materials, handouts, overheads, and props so that you can provide
sufficient context for your students to be immersed in a learning
environment. [Check out "The Vicars Method"].
Don't fool yourself into thinking that you are providing a true learning environment if all
your students do is come suffer through an hour of frustration then go home
and learn ASL from their books, videos, the internet, and Deaf friends. If
that is the case, you are not a great teacher -- you are a lousy
teacher and your students are learning despite you.
Keep in mind two different scenarios.
1. If a teacher works hard and prepares
appropriate supports, then his students tend to work hard and learn. Most
stay with it.
2. If a teacher doesn't prepare and is lazy his students
will get frustrated and give up, or they put up with him in class then go
and learn it on their own. Later they take advanced classes from someone
other than that teacher.
So, to be clear, I recommend a no-voicing environment filled with
plenty of "advance organizers." "Advance organizers" are devices
(visual aids, props, Powerpoints, toys, etc.) that you use while
introducing a topic to enable your students to "figure out" the
topic and link it to what they already know.
If for whatever reason you have decided to incorporate voicing into
your class then I recommend you at least limit voicing to only on certain days or at
certain times. For example: Alternate class days with one being "voice available"
and the next being "voice off." On a Monday/Wednesday
class schedule you can let the students use voice on Monday but not on
Wednesday. That way on Mondays you could have the students do "interpreting-type"
activities where their partner signs a statement and the student interprets
it.
You might want to play vocabulary building games on "voice days."
That way you can explain the game to the students in their native language.
Explaining a game to the students in ASL (in a beginning level class)
often takes way too much time away from the game itself. I prefer for the
students to spend time "playing and using ASL themselves" rather
than watching me "mime and fingerspell" the rules of a game.
Explaining games can be done in a no-voice class by typing up the
instructions for the game and sending the instructions home with the
students to read prior to the next class period. Then play the game
during the
next class period. The students (most of them anyway) will have read about
the game and will readily pick up on how to play it in a no-voice environment.
You might want to use email for this or use a video display.
In any case, whether you use voice or not, the real secret to
classroom success is
preparation and teaching ability. Preparation is a matter of getting
off your duff and doing it. If you lack teaching ability I suggest
you take a "train the trainer course," a drama course, and a course in classroom
management. Also you might consider reading a few books on improving your
interpersonal communication skills. And remember...have a good
time!
[Time passes...]
Remember how I said it isn't very convenient to bring a block of cheese to
class?
Technology has totally changed that. Now it is common for
instructors to use PowerPoint slides and
literally bring hundreds of objects, people, places, and scenarios
to class and display them using a netbook or cell phone and a projector.
[Note: These days using technology in the classroom is standard procedure,
but at the time I first wrote that, it was new and led to a fascinating examination of "computer-assisted ASL
instruction" methodology.
In an email message Marianne writes:
<< Much of my life has been spent working with the Deaf, as they are the true
experts with regards to both ASL, and Deaf culture...>>
(Note: Marianne also
asked my opinion about teaching with or without voice.)
Marianne,
Just for thinking purposes, let me ask you series of questions:
"How do you define an 'expert' on a language?"
"Are most Hearing Americans "experts" on spoken English?
"Are most Hearing Americans able to explain the rules of their language to
other Americans?"
"To what extent would an average American be qualified to teach his language
to a non-native speaker of English?"
"Would teaching to one's native language to a foreigner be more or less
difficult than teaching someone indigenous to America?"
"Is it really immersion when an American goes to another country and is
'immersed' in that language?
Or does that American find himself immersed in
an environment where while much of the target language is new, there is
quite a bit of English available for support. (For example, the locals know
a few words in English, and quite a few of the documents and/or signs are in
English. There is just enough English available to point the traveler in the
right direction or to bridge certain gaps.)"
"Should Deaf children be placed in an all-English classroom and voiced to?"
"Is it better to teach Deaf children general topics using ASL?"
"Is it better to teach Deaf children English using a combination of ASL and
English?" (Should the English used be in spoken or visual format?)
Now, if we should be teaching English to Deaf kids by using ASL, then why or
why not teach ASL to Hearing adults using English?
You answer those questions for me and I'll respond to your answers.
--Dr. Bill
An ASL
instructor writes:
Dr.Bill,
I am hoping you can help me with this. The reason I am contacting you
is because I like your philosophy, and love your website. I have
contacted you before and you replied quickly. I am looking forward to
when I can meet you or take a workshop from you. I imagine by this
point, you're trying to figure out who I am. I'm Janice, from
_____. I contacted you
about two months ago about workshops. I had also asked you about
voicing in class.
I teach "ASL 1 Lab." One of the other instructors who is also deaf, feels
that Deaf presenters should not be allowed in a LAB class. What's more,
they should not use their voice at all. My feeling on this is that it is
up to the presenter if she/he wants to use their voice. I invite
presenters in my lab class because I feel students do benefit from
seeing a variety of signing in ASL. Not all deaf look, sign, act the
same way. In addition the Dean of the college approved of the
presenter.
I have been deaf since birth, and oral for most of my life. Learned ASL
at CSUN at 19 (did have basics before entering CSUN) . My
understanding is, culturally, it is up to the Deaf person to decide if
they want to sign and voice simultaneously. Am I correct?
Thank you.
--Janice
Janice,
When considering how to arrange the "learning environment" you have to
ask, "What is the goal?"
Is the goal to give the impression to Hearing people that Deaf people
cannot and/or do not voice?
Is the goal to spend 10 minutes miming or writing instructions that
could have been explained in a few seconds using voice?
Is the goal to make "Hearies" struggle like Deaf people have done for
thousands of years?
Or, should we consider the individual talents and abilities of the
instructor and encourage him or her to create an environment where the
students can learn the subject matter efficiently and effectively?
If the subject is: "Level 1 students spending 10 minutes guessing and
trying to figure out what they are supposed to be learning" then I guess
requiring an instructor to keep their voice off is certainly
understandable.
On the other hand, if the subject is "ASL Introductions and Greetings"
and an instructor wants to play a game to help the students learn the vocabulary
then I would suggest that it would be much more effective to spend 2 minutes
explaining the game in voice and 8 minutes playing the game in ASL, than
it would be to spend 8 minutes explaining the game in "ASL" and 2 minutes
playing the game. Non-voiced game instructions end up as gestures,
pointing, fingerspelling, and mime since beginning-level students are
not advanced enough to readily understand game instructions given in the
target language.
(Note: There is a
world of
difference between briefly explaining a game using voice, vs teaching a
whole class using simcom. If you are using simcom you are not
modeling ASL.)
So, if you teach in a "no-voice" environment you have two main choices:
You can reduce the use of games and activities in your class to include
only those that can be explained in gestures, pointing, fingerspelling,
and mime. That is a very good approach if your goal is to teach
"gestures, pointing, fingerspelling, and mime."
You can also resort to using written instructions.
That is a good approach to use if your goal is to teach reading.
At this point I should mention that I've experimented with quite
a few different approaches.
I've developed a complete curriculum (http://Lifeprint.com
ASL Level 1 and Level 2) based on an interactive dialog approach that works very
well without requiring any voice. (It does however require an LCD
computer projector).
For a host of reasons,
(cultural, political, etc.) I prefer no-voice
instruction -- utilizing a
"completely silent" classroom.
After a while I got tired of playing "voice cop."
I'm
serious. It felt terrible having to constantly threaten, beg,
cajole, take off points, and otherwise try to intimidate students into
not making a peep trying to live up to the hype that a "total no-voice" classroom would somehow
magically produce better signers.
Eventually, I found out a secret
that I will now share with you:
The problem goes away if you prepare enough, make your class
interesting enough, and get your students signing enough -- often
enough.
I've found that if you make your class "engaging" -- students
actually prefer to sign rather than voice. Signing is FUN.
On the other hand, if I were running a program, I personally would not
"order" any instructor to "never" use any voice in class.
Do not mistake a "properly run, voice-available" classroom with that of
a class taught by a person who resorts to voicing due to lack of
talent.
Some poorly skilled and/or inexperienced instructors are forced to teach from
confusing, non-student friendly textbooks. In an effort to "get by"
those instructors end up photocopying and distributing pages out of the
"teacher's curriculum" and/or voicing in the classroom to help
reduce student frustration and attrition rates (dropouts).
Now, let me point out one very important benefit to having a no-voice
classroom: it provides full access for instructors who have little or no
residual hearing (that means DEAF!). As a "hard of hearing" person I can
"get by" in the Hearing world, but it is neither comfortable nor fun.
If I voice to my students they think I can "hear" them and they start
trying to talk to me from "far away" or while my back is turned.
If that happens I
have to constantly remind them that I'm not Hearing and that they either
need to sign to me or they need to position themselves close by and in front of me
prior to talking. Thus, it works out better for me to simply not
let my students get into that habit by not using voice from
day-1.
In the end, micro-managing of instructors one way
or the other is not good for academic freedom nor for continued development within the discipline. An
instructor tends to produce excellent student outcomes (skilled
signers who exhibit respect for and an understanding of Deaf
culture) when we let them teach in a manner that best matches
their style and abilities.
Cordially,
--Dr. Bill
Lifeprint.com
A rookie Hearing
ASL Instructor writes:
Hi Bill-
I hope all is well with you, Belinda, the kids, and work.
I'm still loving my work with _________ College "ASL 1"
students.
We have just a few class sessions left this semester. Whew! I
Last night, I told my students I am not teaching "ASL 2" in the
Fall. They expressed disappointment, frustration, anger, and I
even heard fear! I assured them they were ready for a new
teacher and new perspective. I have taught this class in
"Voices-off" mode (over 90+% of each class period), but they
STILL expressed concern over an ASL II course with a Deaf
instructor, (or any instructor, actually.) Honestly, this makes
me doubt if I have adequately prepared them for the next level.
Should I have taught this course with 100% "Voices-off"?
I'd love your advice. What else can I do? Say?... Now, and next
semester.
Or maybe this is all typical?...because they don't know, what
they don't know?... and change is hard and...they're currently
comfortable... I always appreciate your perspective.
Regarding "ASL 2," the Chair offered it to me, but I declined
for next semester for a few reasons, including the time slot. I
accepted and am excited to be teaching "ASL 1" again in the fall
and looking forward to tweaking and improving my instruction, as
opposed to "reinventing the wheel" each class. I'm also curious
to know how well-prepared my current students feel in ASL II
next semester. This is data to drive my future ASL I
instruction. (I told them this last night, too.)
Take care,
Name on file
Hello
:)
Great to hear from you! Seems like you are doing well.
You have asked for my advice so I'm going to give it to you
"Deaf blunt."
There are a numerous reasons to teach an ASL class 100% no
voice. Here are a few:
1. Teaching ASL 100% in the target language elevates a class
from being "just a class" to instead being a "bragging rights"
type of experience for the students. It is the difference
between running a marathon and running 90% of a marathon. A
student is much more likely to brag about taking a class in
which the teacher NEVER voiced once than having taken a class
form a teacher who voiced 10%.
2. A no voice class forces students to "burn their ships." They
have to commit their mental resources. If a student knows that
"eventually" the instructor will switch to voice and make
everything clear via the student's native language -- the
psychological "oh hey, I'd better focus and watch intently here
or I'm going to miss this" mental switch never gets flipped.
3. Teaching 100% no voice helps immunize you to accusations of
"audism" or that you are taking advantage of "Hearing
privilege."
4. Teaching in the target language is like providing the full
set of weights to a weight lifter or body builder. Adding a
little voice is like removing weight from the bar. The person
has less resistance to push against and thus develops smaller
muscles. A student in a "partially voiced" class has less need
to use their eyes and thus develops less ability to track hand
movements, recognize facial expressions, and figure out signed
messages.
If you voice to your students "a little" here and there -- it is
"easier" for them to learn from you as a Hearing instructor than
from a Deaf instructor. Thus it will be
comparatively "harder"
to learn from a Deaf instructor. Then when your students "do"
learn from a Deaf instructor your students will think, "Gee, it
was easier to learn in my previous class. Now this class is
harder. So this (Deaf) instructor must not be as good of an
instructor so I think I'll rate him/her lower at the end of the
semester on the teacher evaluation form." Then when it comes
time for the Chair or Dean to make ranking decisions regarding
who gets to teach next semester your rank will be higher and if
there is only one class left you will get that class and the
Deaf instructor will not. This is an example of "Hearing
privilege" financially harming Deaf people.
You state (more or less) that your students are feeling
"concern, frustration, anger, and fear" regarding taking a class
from a Deaf person. If you had taught the class 100% no voice
would the students still be afraid of taking the class from a
Deaf instructor? If the answer is "no, they would not" (or even
"less so") -- then
your teaching methods
have caused your students "concern, frustration, anger, and
fear" TOWARDS a future Deaf instructor.
How do you think that makes Deaf instructors feel about Hearing
instructors who voice (during ASL classes) even just 10% of the
time?
When Deaf people get together in the hallway or at a restaurant
and start chatting what do you think they say about Hearing ASL
instructors who voice to their classes?
Do you want them to "say" such things about you or lump you in
with other "audist Hearing instructors of ASL?"
My advice? Turn off your voice around (college-level ASL)
students and
never
voice to them. That includes before and after class. Otherwise
you are choosing to play on an un-level playing field.
[You've already opened the can of worms this semester so you'll
have to be careful regarding how you wrap things up so as to
keep your students in a positive frame of mind.]
As far as helping your students feel "ready" for ASL 2 you can
simply find out the curriculum that is being used for ASL 2 and
then encourage the students to purchase the book ahead of time
and study it over the summer.
If they will do that they will be light years ahead of students
who just show up cold.
Also, your students can use Lifeprint and my videos to beef up
their overall vocabulary. Even if my lessons do not directly
match the Signing Naturally lessons the students will still
benefit from having larger vocabularies. Also they should visit
www.asl.ms/mobile and practice their receptive
fingerspelling until they can understand the "fast" speed.
Cordially,
Bill
And now...part two of my response to your recent email. My
previous response was only the "cautionary" part of the
story.
The fact that your students had a strong reaction to you not
teaching next semester is actually a very nice compliment to
you and your teaching methods. It means they very much
enjoyed your class and want more of you. BRAVO!
What they are feeling is indeed common for ASL 1 students
who are currently taking a class from a caring, thoughtful,
passionate instructor. The students aren't comparing you vs
the next semester's instructor as much as they are comparing
all of their previous instructors to you and that means you
have been doing a great job.
- Bill
Note:
Simcom stands for "simultaneous communication." It is the
process of signing and voicing at the same time. Simcom
necessarily follows English word order since you are
voicing. Thus a person using simcom is not
modeling ASL.