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The American Sign Language (ASL) fingerspelled alphabet is often a starting point for novice sign learners. The twenty-six handshapes of the alphabet are typically compiled into visual pedagogical materials designed to help learners master this cornerstone of sign learning. Second-language sign learners often make mistakes in their signing that are related to the fact that signs are visual symbols which thus appear differently depending on one's perspective. In this study, we analyzed fifty-two commonly available representations of the ASL alphabet to determine the degree of variability exhibited among these materials for general characteristics, such as the medium employed (photographs, digital illustrations, or hand drawings), inclusion of alphabet graphemes and/or object images, and representations of diversity, as well as five parameters related to perspective-taking: perspective on the sign (signer/addressee), angle of hand (0, 45, or 90 degrees), directionality of hand (facing left, right, or front), hand selection (left or right hand), and depiction of movement. We discovered a high degree of variability in the way that ASL handshapes are represented pictorially, with most of the letters of the alphabet exhibiting either moderate or high variability in the perspectives, angles, and directionalities of the hand portrayed. We conclude that there is a great deal of heterogeneity in the way that the ASL finger-spelling alphabet is represented in didactic materials, and we suggest ways that educators and publishers can improve their teaching materials by incorporating multiple visual perspectives.
Details
Graphemes;
Adult Learning;
Finger Spelling;
Language Acquisition;
Phonology;
American Sign Language;
Adult Basic Education;
Autism Spectrum Disorders;
English;
Linguistics;
Alphabets;
Deafness;
Signs;
Control Groups;
Instructional Materials;
Orthographic Symbols;
Novices;
Second Language Learning;
Phonemes;
Sign Language;
Phonetics
Phonology;
Sign language;
Drawings;
Teaching;
American Sign Language;
Variability;
Autism;
Graphemes;
Photography;
Language acquisition;
Linguistics;
Hands;
Teachers;
Adult students;
Fingerspelling;
Adult learning;
Visual artists;
Deafness;
Perspective taking;
Errors;
Spelling;
Handshapes;
Alphabet letters
1 holds a doctorate in linguistics from the University of Texas at Austin and completed postdoctoral training in psychology at the University of Chicago and Boston University. He is currently associate professor of speech pathology and audiology at Miami University and the associate editor of the journal Autism and Developmental Language Impairments
2 earned her master's degree in speech-language pathology from Miami University and her bachelor's degree in communication sciences and disorders from the University of Cincinnati. During her studies, she contributed to research on American Sign Language acquisition (SLAM Lab, Miami University) and multilingualism in preschool children (PedLLS Lab, University of Cincinnati). She now specializes in working with preschool children who are deaf or hard of hearing