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Question 1 Why use British Sign Language (BSL)? Won’t made up signs and gestures
work just as well?
British Sign Language is a beautiful, expressive and visual language, which has
been recognised as a language in its own right in England. Research has shown that
babies exposed to a second language develop verbal and cognitive skills
very well in both languages. It makes sense to learn a language and not just gestures
or made up signs.
According to the British Deaf Association, (bda.org.uk) BSL is the first or preferred
language of around 250,000 Deaf people in the UK. Around 120,000 hearing people
also use BSL, meaning it is used more than Welsh or Gaelic.
On 18th March 2003 BSL was recognised as an official British language by the UK
government.
The advantage with using BSL signs is that they are standardised throughout
the UK. If you buy any BSL dictionary you will find that the majority of signs are
made the same way. You will occasionally find some regional variations in BSL but
even these do not pose a challenge. Hearing babies and toddlers use very basic signs
that can be understood by BSL users throughout UK.
Using a standardised system offers consistency over a wide range of settings.
In childcare and educational settings for example, if children are taught BSL signs
they can go to nurseries and preschool environments and use the same signs. Teachers
or children that move to centres using non-standard signs will have to learn an
entirely new set of signs. This would be very confusing, especially for children
who have been taught made up signs at home.
Teachers recognise the importance of creating “inclusive” educational environments
where ALL children can successfully learn and socialise, no matter what special
needs they may have. Using non-standard signs may actually prevent children in these
environments from communicating with one another. A speech–Language Pathologist
–Kelly Kirchmar, MA,CCC-SLP, (although she was referring to the standardised system
in America, ASL, BSL is the equivalent in the UK,) had this to say:
“We use ASL due to the fact that some of our children will be using signs to communicate
for a very long time. It is MOST rewarding to see all of the children in the classroom,
both children with special needs and typically developing children, using signs
to communicate with each other.”
Further-more, Deaf children can also benefit if more children and parents and educators
learnt BSL. Signing does not have to stop once your child starts to speak. Currently
many Deaf schools throughout the UK have been closed down and Deaf children are
integrated into main stream schools. The Deaf children that access these schools,
although they attend their deaf units, are still quite isolated. It would benefit
them greatly if others were able to embrace this language and communicate with deaf
people. That would be true integration!
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