American Sign Language Level 4
Overview
The content includes:
- ASL vocabulary and structures for sharing and giving opinions about tendencies, personal qualities (self and others), and comparing these
- Depicting a timeline for personal goals and desires/dreams, and using 3D space to identify milestones
- Discussing and comparing prices of product(s) such as airfares, food, restaurant meals
- Two of ASL’s numbering systems – Cardinal numbers versus Price/Cost numbers
- Understanding the Deaf community as a linguistic and cultural minority, not as disabled
- Introduction to some themes in Deaf visual arts such as the significance of depicting hands and ears in paintings by Chuck Baird
- Culturally appropriate norms of social interaction – appropriate level of “bluntness” and “directness”
The following global ideas guide the design and delivery of this course:
1. The Deaf community comprises a vibrant linguistic and cultural minority whose members are connected through shared values, norms, art, traditions and especially the primacy of using a signed language.
2. The creativity and strength of the Deaf community contribute positively to the larger human society; Deaf lives exemplify unique and enriching ways of seeing and being in the world.
3. ASL (American Sign Language), LSQ (la Langue des Signes Québécoises) and ISL (Indigenous Sign Languages) are rich, visual-gestural languages used by Deaf people in Canada. Signed languages are distinctly different from spoken languages; they have their syntax, vocabulary, grammatical structures, pragmatic norms, and literary forms.
4. Studying ASL can be an exciting challenge for the majority of people who have only used language(s) that are spoken and auditory. Because ASL is a visual-gestural language, it requires the learner to use their eyes to take in linguistic information and to use their hands, face, and body to convey linguistic information. Even though spoken languages incorporate some form of gestural communication, the use of 3-dimensional space is an integral feature of the structure of ASL.
Class activities may include: lecture and language lab, demonstration/modeling, dialogue, and small group conversational practice, course readings/videos, among others.
This course will conform to Douglas College Evaluation policy regarding the number and weighting of evaluations. Typical means of evaluation may include a combination of:
• Quizzes to evaluate factual knowledge of ASL & Deaf culture
• Quizzes to evaluate receptive ASL skills
• Demonstration of expressive ASL skills
• Assigned dialogues and interaction
• Attendance and participation
Sample grade breakdown for this course might be as follows:
Video assignment 1: 20%
Video assignment 2: 20%
Mid-term exam 1: 20%
Mid-term exam 2: 20%
Final exam: 20%
Total: 100%
No single assignment will be worth more than 20%.
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to:
- Demonstrate moderate conversational ASL skill to do the following:
o Share opinions about tendencies, personal qualities, as well as comparing these, while being culturally appropriate
o Use a diverse vocabulary of ASL adjectives
o Recognize and use different number systems (e.g. cardinal numbers versus pricing numbers)
o Ask where to find a particular/item object in a room (spatial locatives)
o Use geographic signs for provinces, states, and some countries around the world as part of a conversation about personal goals such as traveling, moving, volunteering/working or vacationing
o Provide brief introductions to various notable Deaf communities
o Narrate one’s version of a story, incorporating role-shifting with emphasis on personification and characterization
- Narrate one’s version of a story, incorporating role-shifting with emphasis on personification and characterization
- Recognize the significance of using appropriately direct messages, in keeping with the “bluntness” of Deaf cultural norms
- Demonstrate the use of appropriate register in ASL when sharing and giving opinion
- Recognize the significance and demonstrate the practice of informing a Deaf person of background noises and/or distractions
The instructor might choose an ASL textbook such as:
Smith, Cheri (2008). Signing Naturally. Student Workbook. San Diego, CA: DawnSignPress.
Requisites
Prerequisites
MODL 1261 or Assessment
Corequisites
No corequisite courses.
Equivalencies
No equivalent courses.
Course Guidelines
Course Guidelines for previous years are viewable by selecting the version desired. If you took this course and do not see a listing for the starting semester / year of the course, consider the previous version as the applicable version.
Course Transfers
These are for current course guidelines only. For a full list of archived courses please see https://www.bctransferguide.ca
Institution | Transfer Details for MODL 1262 |
---|---|
Alexander College (ALEX) | ALEX HUMN 1XX (3) |
Athabasca University (AU) | AU LANG 2XX (3) |
Coast Mountain College (CMTN) | No credit |
College of the Rockies (COTR) | COTR LING 1XX (3) |
Kwantlen Polytechnic University (KPU) | KPU LANC 1XXX (3) |
Simon Fraser University (SFU) | No credit |
Thompson Rivers University (TRU) | TRU HUEL 1XXX (3) |
Trinity Western University (TWU) | TWU GENS 1XX (3) |
University Canada West (UCW) | UCW HUMN 1XX (3) |
University of Northern BC (UNBC) | UNBC INTS 252 (3) |
University of the Fraser Valley (UFV) | UFV MOLA 1XX (3) |
University of Victoria (UVIC) | UVIC ASL 200B (1.5) |
Vancouver Community College (VCC) | DOUG MODL 1261 (3) & DOUG MODL 1262 (3) = VCC SIGN 2000 (6) |