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Journal ArticleDOI

Preparing to Watch TV: A Training Model for Accessing Captions for Students who are Deaf

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TLDR
An instructional method was implemented among a group of junior high school students who are deaf, to train them to be attentive to certain types of information by facilitating their acquisition of knowledge and critical viewing and the results bring into question the issue of true accessibility and the utility of the format of captioning as presently developed.
Abstract
Adding captions to televised programs was a media modification to enable accessibility of television to people with restricted access to the audio components, such as those who are deaf or hard-of hearing. Captioned television for the deaf is becoming quite common. In the United States, television captions are generally in written English; however, the English literacy rate among people who are deaf is quite low. Therefore, this research explored a way to make captioned television usable by its intended audience. An instructional method was implemented among a group of junior high school students who are deaf, to train them to be attentive to certain types of information by facilitating their acquisition of knowledge and critical viewing. The initial implementation of the training suggests a need for improving deaf students' access to their prior knowledge to apply to reading comprehension and language related skills. The results of the two-week training of no increase in captioning comprehension bring in...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Video-Tutorials for Tech Sign Vocabulary in Astronomy.

TL;DR: This article describes the mediated American Sing Language presentation of technical vocabulary and definitions within the context of a web-based astronomy course for first year students at the National Technical Institute for the Deaf at Rochester Institute of Technology.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Child development and emergent literacy

TL;DR: It is proposed that emergent literacy consists of at least two distinct domains: inside-out skills and outside-in skills, which appear to be influential at different points in time during reading acquisition.
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How Do Children Who Can't Hear Learn to Read an Alphabetic Script? A Review of the Literature on Reading and Deafness.

TL;DR: The contribution of three communication systems to reading: spoken language, English-based sign, and American Sign Language are explored, mediated by four parameters on which they differ: codability, structural isomorphism, accessibility, and processibility.
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Prior knowledge and reading comprehension ability of deaf adolescents.

TL;DR: The regression model showed that, for the group pretested with an in-depth, or long, probe of PK, the best predictor of RC was the ability to answer TE and SI questions.
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Essential Practices as Adults Read to Meet the Needs of Deaf or Hard of Hearing Students

TL;DR: The literature in related fields is reviewed in an attempt to assist teachers and parents in identifying practices that are supported by research and linked to literacy attainment.
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