You may have your culture/grammar review sheet out, but put everything else away. Music is allowed (and food/drink), but no texting/phones necessary and only ASL on your desks. You may also practice your presentation while you play.
Final Jeopardy Question
1. Deaf Culture 2. Deaf History
100
4. Fast Facts 5. Deaf Education
500
400
300
200
100 100 100 100
200 200 200 200
300 300 300300
400 400 400 400
500 500 500500
3. Grammar
This is a natural language, the
sign language of Deaf people in the
USA
Back
What is ASL?
Back
This man founded the first school for the deaf in the USA
Back
Who was Gallaudet?
Back
This person believed deaf people should not marry or have
children, and thought deafness
was contagious. He was an inventor, and
a phone company was named after him
Back
Who was Alexander Graham Bell?
Back
Back
These are given to you by deaf people, and
are ways to represent your name without
having to fingerspell it.
What are name signs?
Back
These professionals generally discourage hearing parents from using signs with their
deaf babies (even though they ironically
often encourage signing with hearing
babies)
Back
Who are doctors/speech therapists/Audiologists/medical professionals?
Back
This movement was the first time that
Deaf rights and Deaf pride made national
and international news
Back
What is « Deaf President Now » ?
Back
This is the region in England where the deaf people lived before moving
to Martha’s Vineyard in the USA
Back
What is Kent ?
Back
This is the language that both hearing and deaf people used for school, work, etc, in a specific place in the USA in the
1700’s and early 1800’s.
Back
What is Martha’s Vineyard Sign Language?
Back
Back
This is the education method that research
shows encourages the best English fluency in deaf
individuals
What is the ASL bilingual method ?
Back
These are the two types of students’
signing that combined with the
Old French Sign Language of their
teacher to form Old ASL
Back
What are home signs and Martha’s Vineyard Sign Language?
Back
This is writing in all capital letters, one word for each
sign.
Back
What is an ASL gloss ?
Back
The line over the capital letters and its symbol in written ASL
show what to do with this.
Back
What is your facial expression?
Back
This is ASL word order (also known as Topic-Comment structure).
Back
What is TIME OBJECT SUBJECT VERB ?
Back
Back
This is spoken English word order.
What is Subject Verb Object
(SVO) ?
Back
These are what we call signs such as
---to, and, or, so, ...
Back
What is Signed English (Signed English markers,
prepositions, etc.)?
Back
This is the meaning of Deaf (instead of
deaf).
Back
What is culturally Deaf ?
Back
90% of deaf children are born to these
parents.
Back
What are hearing parents?
Back
This is the appropriate term for
those who can switch from the
hearing and Deaf worlds (who may
also identify themselves as
Deaf).Back
What is hard of hearing ? (remember, not the
offensive term hearing impaired)
Back
Back
When was the International
Congress in Milan, Italy, which met
on deaf education?
What is 1880?
Back
This is the average reading level of deaf students when they
graduate high school (a failure of deaf education
in the USA)
Back
What is a 3rd or 4th grade reading level?
Back
This is when the first school for the deaf was founded
in the USA.
Back
What is 1817?
Back
This is where the first school for the deaf was founded in the USA.
Back
What is Hartford, Connecticut?
Back
This is what was decided at the International
Congress on deaf education in Milan, Italy
Back
What is Oralism, or no signing allowed in deaf education?
Back
Back
This is the signing system that was
invented by hearing people, and is not a signed language (it
is just a visual version of a spoken
language).
What is Signed English (or SEE, MCE,
etc.)?
Back
This is the method that began in the
1970’s to use “whatever works” in deaf education (but