I would like to reiterate how clear and understandable your signs are. I am an ASL student with three months in the culture and language, and your signing is the first higher speed signing I have been able to entirely keep up with. Very well done, thank you for this terrific video. I hope you will do many more!
i am watch of your vidoes and think good as for imformation to asl students. i 17 year old and i am deaf. you seem like good interpreter. thank you for teach our deaf culture to hearing students. it itself mean alot to me and friends i have. thank you asl rocks!!!!!!!!
I am an ASL student and I'm very thankful for this posting. I most certainly would never want to offend anyone no matter what. So thankyou! I'm still learning but your video was fairly easy to follow
I was taught all of these important things while in my three years of high school sign language. However high school has been a long time ago, and other than a quick hi to a deaf friend i do not sign much anymore. Your video was so clear and well signed! I was shocked I understood the entire video! Thank you, Nice Job :-)
This is great research and information. I teach ASL to beginners and often mention all of these things during my lessons at some point, but it is nice to have it all here in one place and signed as well. It will give them the chance to catch some of the signs I taught them and also realize that I have support for the things that I have shared with them.
I have always learned to never sign "excuse me" when forced to walk between 2 Deaf signers. I was told it can be very distracting to the current conversation.
Hi! Thanks for comment! If you click above on the "Show more" button, the text is below. You can copy, print off, and pass out to students and share along with watching video. Happy it is useful. Something I've seen done is having a jar with a fine (5-10 cents?) that has to be put into the jar when students break the signing policy and start chatting or asking questions in English...I know it is hard for new signers..they naturally want to discuss in English.
Hi! Thanks for this...this will help me with teaching my ASL students (they've been so rude with me in the classroom...constantly talking and not signing--I'm Deaf.) However, they're SUCH beginners (can fingerspell though). I'm wondering, could you caption this? I can try to type up a transcript for my students to read along with this, but then they'll just end up reading the paper and not watching the video, which kind of defeats the purpose, right? Again, thank you for posting this.
Etiquette for ASL Students ... what about etiquette for the Deaf Community when talking to ASL students. Or is this what the video is about? I have no idea because it is not captioned. I am DEAF. Not hard of hearing but totally deaf - suddenly totally deaf at the age of 68, only 2 years ago. If you were not born deaf then the Deaf Community cannot be bothered with you and this video is a prime example.
You should try taking an ASL class, I'm not sure if it is the case in every college, but at my University all of the teachers that teach ASL are deaf. Everyone learns the same way, weather you are hearing or not. Just a thought :)
I would like to reiterate how clear and understandable your signs are. I am an ASL student with three months in the culture and language, and your signing is the first higher speed signing I have been able to entirely keep up with. Very well done, thank you for this terrific video. I hope you will do many more!
ASL/Interpreting student here... I just want to say I love the way you sign! Very clear and easy to understand. Thank you for this video!
Transcripts are nice, but I prefer captions, especially if the captions show ASL grammar, they help me learn
i am watch of your vidoes and think good as for imformation to asl students. i 17 year old and i am deaf. you seem like good interpreter. thank you for teach our deaf culture to hearing students. it itself mean alot to me and friends i have. thank you asl rocks!!!!!!!!
I am an ASL student and I'm very thankful for this posting. I most certainly would never want to offend anyone no matter what. So thankyou! I'm still learning but your video was fairly easy to follow
I was taught all of these important things while in my three years of high school sign language. However high school has been a long time ago, and other than a quick hi to a deaf friend i do not sign much anymore. Your video was so clear and well signed! I was shocked I understood the entire video! Thank you, Nice Job :-)
This is great research and information. I teach ASL to beginners and often mention all of these things during my lessons at some point, but it is nice to have it all here in one place and signed as well. It will give them the chance to catch some of the signs I taught them and also realize that I have support for the things that I have shared with them.
thanks for posting. I enjoy watching and learning from you.
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Excellent motivation :-) I personally learned best when completely immersed in the culture and language, Even if it seemed "too hard."
I have always learned to never sign "excuse me" when forced to walk between 2 Deaf signers. I was told it can be very distracting to the current conversation.
I would annoy my deaf friends by doing a "Matrix bullet time" when I walked between them, slowing down just as I blocked their view. Don't do that.
Hi! Thanks for comment! If you click above on the "Show more" button, the text is below. You can copy, print off, and pass out to students and share along with watching video. Happy it is useful. Something I've seen done is having a jar with a fine (5-10 cents?) that has to be put into the jar when students break the signing policy and start chatting or asking questions in English...I know it is hard for new signers..they naturally want to discuss in English.
Hi! Thanks for this...this will help me with teaching my ASL students (they've been so rude with me in the classroom...constantly talking and not signing--I'm Deaf.) However, they're SUCH beginners (can fingerspell though). I'm wondering, could you caption this? I can try to type up a transcript for my students to read along with this, but then they'll just end up reading the paper and not watching the video, which kind of defeats the purpose, right? Again, thank you for posting this.
This was so interesting for me to watch even though i didnt have a clue what you were saying. :)
Thank you!!
Show words on the screen please
This was very interesting!
English Translation in the description box
Etiquette for ASL Students ... what about etiquette for the Deaf Community when talking to ASL students. Or is this what the video is about? I have no idea because it is not captioned. I am DEAF. Not hard of hearing but totally deaf - suddenly totally deaf at the age of 68, only 2 years ago. If you were not born deaf then the Deaf Community cannot be bothered with you and this video is a prime example.
English translation is in the description box. Don't be so quick to jump to conclusions and chastise.
Missed the description, but captions would make learning ASL easier. I cannot see the description and the video at the same time.
You should try taking an ASL class, I'm not sure if it is the case in every college, but at my University all of the teachers that teach ASL are deaf. Everyone learns the same way, weather you are hearing or not. Just a thought :)
Can you CC this please?
It's all in the description box. :)
Have no idea
Moi je veux savoir :(
Telkno....Oh see AsL Deaf who's think commu?