idea for SW book

MARIA GALEA maria.azzopardi at UM.EDU.MT
Sat Jan 19 14:42:36 UTC 2013


Hi Erika,
Hope you are fine, and happy new year. Great to hear about the next steps
in your book. i can't open the link to the other story of the pear..any
idea how to get that story? Also will the data be available to use by
other researchers who would look at other aspects of it such as
cross-linguistic
comparisons? I really hope you manage to pool in a good number of texts.
Will be very glad to help with the LSM written story for you.
Thanks
maria

> Hi KJ - thanks for your feedback. The frog story is quite long but you're
> right that an excerpt might work!
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Jan 18, 2013, at 9:44 PM, "KJ Boal" <kjoanne403 at SIGNWRITING.ORG> wrote:
>
>> I do like the idea of cross-linguistic elicitation material like what
>> you’ve suggested, though I think both those pieces are quite long – we
>> might want to select an excerpt from one of them. (My vote is for
>> something from Frog, Where Are You? – I like being able to look back and
>> forth at the pictures to construct the story in my mind, since I don’t
>> normally think in ASL. I know I’d find a picture story easier to work
>> with than a video.)
>> Great idea!
>> KJ
>>
>> From: SignWriting List: Read and Write Sign Languages
>> [mailto:SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU] On Behalf Of Erika
>> Hoffmann-Dilloway
>> Sent: Friday, January 18, 2013 1:17 PM
>> To: SW-L at LISTSERV.VALENCIACOLLEGE.EDU
>> Subject: Re: idea for SW book
>>
>> Hi all!
>> I've been thinking over what material we should use a shared starting
>> point for producing SW documents for the book. I don't want to us to
>> translate from a text in a written (signed or spoken) language. So, I'm
>> thinking the best approach might be to an elicitation material commonly
>> used in cross-linguistic spoken and signed language research, such as
>> Frog, Where Are You? (a picture story with no written text) or The Pear
>> Story video.
>> For those not familiar -
>> The former can be seen in the appendix of this article:
>> http://childes.psy.cmu.edu/manuals/frog.pdf
>> The latter can be viewed here: http://pearstories.org/
>> I suggest one of these because they've been chosen precisely because
>> they are thought to be relatively cross-culturally accessible - and we
>> are a diverse group :)
>> They are also thought to elicit interesting grammatical variation in
>> languages.
>> Finally, because there is so much research on sign languages that has
>> used these materials for elicitation, the texts you produce can more
>> easily become a part of a broad comparative cannon.
>> Frog, Where Are You? will be more work for you all though, as
>> translating it will certainly take much longer - and for that reason The
>> Pear Stories might be a better choice.
>> However, it would be really cool if another result of this project was
>> to contribute to the written sign language literature available for
>> d/Deaf children and other readers!
>> Mercer Meyer has been very generous in lending this story to research,
>> and I can look into what it would take to make it permissible to have
>> multilingual versions of the text with the illustrations available on
>> the SSW website. Having the translations be useful not only for research
>> purposes but also for kids to read would certainly be in the SW spirit!
>> What do you all think?
>> Best,
>> Erika
>>
>> On Thu, Jan 17, 2013 at 3:41 PM, Valerie Sutton <signwriting at mac.com>
>> wrote:
>> SignWriting List
>> January 17, 2013
>>
>> On Jan 17, 2013, at 9:38 AM, Erika Hoffmann-Dilloway
>> <erhoffma at oberlin.edu> wrote:
>> Yes, I think for the purposes of this project it's fine for participants
>> to create the document in whatever way they prefer. Many who use
>> SignPuddles may want to use that option, but delegs, or even handwriting
>> are fine with me. These different approaches themselves provide
>> interesting data for my project!
>>
>> ---------
>>
>> Yes…I agree. Another software program is SignWriter Studio, developed in
>> Honduras, and in Honduras they also have shown us some amazing
>> handwritten documents using full stick figures - so the variety of
>> software and writing styles is quite amazing…
>>
>> Take a look at the Honduran document attached…this looks like documents
>> from Denmark too:
>>
>> <image001.jpg>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> Val ;-)
>>
>> Valerie Sutton
>> SignWriting List moderator
>> sutton at signwriting.org
>>
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>>
>>
>> Valerie Sutton
>> Sutton at SignWriting.org
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>>
>> --
>> Erika Hoffmann-Dilloway
>> Assistant Professor of Anthropology
>> Oberlin College
>



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