Literature DB >> 17849610

Toward a description of deaf college students' written English: overuse, avoidance, and mastery of function words.

Rachel Channon1, Edna Edith Sayers.   

Abstract

The use of function words in 135 essays written by deaf college underclassmen in developmental and credit-bearing English composition classes is described and compared with Standard English (SE) versions of teh same essay. If student and SE version were the same, this was considered mastery; if the student omitted a word, this was considered avoidance; and if the student added a word, this was considered overuse. The deaf students varied from SE more for function than for content words. They demonstrated low mastery of independent clause markers, demonstratives, third-person singular neuter pronouns, and modals related to possibility, but had relatively high mastery of the first-person singular; and some punctuation. These students strongly avoided some dependent clause markers, some demonstratives, the indefinite article, punctuation except for periods and commas, and the modal verbs may, might and should , but greatly overused other dependent clause markers, the second person and third-person pronouns, quantifiers, the verb do, and the modals could and will. They were also more likely to produce run-ons than fragments.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 17849610     DOI: 10.1353/aad.2007.0018

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am Ann Deaf        ISSN: 0002-726X


  2 in total

1.  Reading Function and Content Words in Subtitled Videos.

Authors:  Izabela Krejtz; Agnieszka Szarkowska; Maria Łogińska
Journal:  J Deaf Stud Deaf Educ       Date:  2015-12-16

2.  Line breaks in subtitling: an eye tracking study on viewer preferences.

Authors:  Olivia Gerber-Morón; Agnieszka Szarkowska
Journal:  J Eye Mov Res       Date:  2018-05-17       Impact factor: 0.957

  2 in total

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