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Children, Australian sign language and the web; the possibilities

conference contribution
posted on 2004-01-01, 00:00 authored by K Ellis, Katherine Blashki
This paper examines the advantages of using the World Wide Web (Web) as a resource to teach hearing primary aged children Australian Sign Language (Auslan). There is a trend towards educating signing deaf children in mainstream schools, therefore it is important to teach the hearing children sign language to enable meaningful communication and the formation of social relationships between hearing and deaf students. The authors will compare various methods of teaching sign language with the Web and further describe a selection of the available instructional material. Considerations for designing appropriate sign language teaching material for the Web are discussed particularly in the context of designing content that engages the primary school aged audience.

History

Event

Australian World Wide Web Conference (10th : 2004 : Gold Coast, Qld.)

Publisher

Southern Cross University

Location

Gold Coast, Qld.

Place of publication

Lismore, N.S.W.

Start date

2004-07-03

End date

2004-07-07

ISBN-10

0975164414

Language

eng

Publication classification

E2 Full written paper - non-refereed / Abstract reviewed

Copyright notice

2004, Southern Cross University

Title of proceedings

AusWeb04 : The 10th Australian World Wide Web Conference Proceedings

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