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ADSmitleyJones's Shop

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Taught ASL for nearly 20 years, ESL/ELL for just under five years. "Retired" from teaching and/or interpreting. Desire to use my knowledge and acquired resources (in ASL, ESL/ELL, and world history) to create worksheets, activities, rubrics, and etc.

Taught ASL for nearly 20 years, ESL/ELL for just under five years. "Retired" from teaching and/or interpreting. Desire to use my knowledge and acquired resources (in ASL, ESL/ELL, and world history) to create worksheets, activities, rubrics, and etc.
Deaf Experience/Ear Plug Experiment
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Deaf Experience/Ear Plug Experiment

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Who it’s for: American Sign Language (ASL) instructors/educators. What’s included: Activity description with details for students to follow on how to conduct the experience/experiment as well as how to compose the journal/paper. Rubric for educators to utilize to aid in grading the level of participation, thought, and composition. Formats offered doc, xls, and PDF – same information/questions on either file, per the name of the files. Why it’s useful: As ASL instructors, we are often confronted with students that have not had personal exposure to d/Deaf world. In some cases, we simply live and teach in areas that are not highly concentrated with d/Deaf and therefore lack the ability to aid our students in experiencing the d/Deaf world. The purpose of the Deaf experience/Ear plug experiment is to give students a glimpse of what it is to be d/Deaf and operate within the hearing world. Extra information: This project is intensive, but the purpose of the experience/experiment should warrant a more involved assignment. All parameters for the project are available for each instructor’s personal alteration. The Excel file contains a single tab/worksheet of the rubric. The Excel file will enable you to alter the headers and/or information therein. Also, with a bit of work, you should be able to modify the Excel file to compute students’ grades for you.
Non-Manual Markers Activity - Facial Expressions & Body Language
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Non-Manual Markers Activity - Facial Expressions & Body Language

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Who it’s for: American Sign Language (ASL) instructors/educators What’s included: Activity for students to practice becoming comfortable and understanding the importance of using non-manual markers (facial expressions and body language specifically). Formats offered doc and PDF – same information/questions on either file. Why it’s useful: For those educators who desire to use an activity for students to practice, and subsequently submit their best work, non-manual markers of ASL. Educators can use this activity as either in-class or as homework - best suggestion is for homework where students are able to practice in private initially. Extra information: Not provided here, but is provided through my other resources, is an Activity Rubric. While this activity is seemingly designed as a yes/no - done/not-done type of assignment, instructors may wish to apply a grade. Please look for the “Activity Participation Rubrics” provided in shop.