[sw-l] UK: SignWriting Used in Two New Studies

Valerie Sutton sutton at SIGNWRITING.ORG
Wed Oct 20 15:00:56 UTC 2004


SignWriting List
October 20, 2004

Dear SW List Members, and all those from the UK, including Sandy and 
Trevor -

What do you think of the two new studies using SignWriting in the UK? 
Stacy Busek's study is one of them. Please read below and give Stacy 
and all of us, your opinions and suggestions...

SignWriting is starting to spread in the UK, judging by the private 
mail I am receiving...I can tell you about the second project 
later...but please give us feedback on Stacy's right now....Many 
thanks!  Val ;-)

---------------


On Oct 19, 2004, at 3:08 PM, Stacy Busek wrote:

> Dear All,
> I sent the message below to Val today and along with her own personal 
> response to my questions and requests she has suggested that I also 
> post my questions to you all in the hope of gaining some more 
> specialist advice.
> Many thanks in advance for reading this message, I hope to hear from 
> some of you soon.
> Yours
>  Stacy Busek
>  
> Valerie
>    
>  I wonder if I could ask for some support for the final year 
> dissertation that I am about to embark on, the working title of which 
> is 'SignWriting: An Investigation into the benefits of promoting a 
> writing system for Sign Language users'
>    
>  I am a final year Undergraduate Linguistics and Psychology student 
> studying in Bristol, England, doing my final year dissertation in the 
> field of Linguistics. I know that through my research I want to 
> support the values of using SignWriting, a topic on which I have 
> commited a lot of hours in both research and personal interest. 
> Furthermore I know that this will not be the final piece of research 
> that I will do in this area, having already established links with 
> James Shepard-Kegl I am planning on volunteering in Bluefields on 
> graduating next year. My concern is that I am fairly restricted by my 
> course, having to write a dissertation of only eight thousand words, 
> and I do not want my research question to be too broad. As I have 
> already mentioned, I know I will dedicate more time in the future to 
> SignWriting so am not concerned about covering all aspects of 
> SignWriting and its linguistic merit in this piece of research - 
> something which would only hinder the clarity!  of such a shorrt piece 
> of work and the resultant grade. I am asking therefore that you could 
> spare the time to guide me in the right direction with my research 
> question. Are there any areas of SignWriting that would be 
> particularly amenable to being studied at this level? Are there any 
> particular recent research papers which would merit being duplicated 
> at my level in order that I may be able to support the research? Given 
> the time frame would you suggest a literary study of the development 
> of SignWriting? I have a month in January to dedicate solely to 
> research if you would suggest the primary research would be of benefit 
> for this undertaking and must hand in the completed piece of research 
> in May - giving me 7 months to complete my work. I sign BSL to level 
> two and am fluent in Spanish (this I include only for your knowledge, 
> it may be of use in helping me to make this decision).
>    
>  I do have several ideas of my own in the event that you are unable to 
> support me in my studies, so please do not worry unduly if this is a 
> huge imposition upon your time.
>    
>  Many thanks for having taken the time to read this letter and I look 
> forward to hearing from you.
>    
>  Yours
>    
>  Stacy Busek  
>
>  MSN Premium gives you PC protection, junk-mail filters, advanced 
> communication tools and great software like MSN Encarta® Premium. 
> Click here for a FREE trial! 
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: not available
Type: text/enriched
Size: 3920 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://listserv.linguistlist.org/pipermail/sw-l/attachments/20041020/82898a8d/attachment.bin>


More information about the Sw-l mailing list