Texas Administrative Code
Title 19 - EDUCATION
Part 2 - TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY
Chapter 114 - TEXAS ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS FOR LANGUAGES OTHER THAN ENGLISH
Subchapter C - HIGH SCHOOL
Section 114.37 - American Sign Language, Level IV (One Credit), Adopted 2014
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 114.37
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) General requirements. Level IV can be offered in middle or high school. At the high school level, students shall be awarded one credit for successful completion of this course. American Sign Language (ASL) Levels I, II, and III are prerequisites for this course.
(b) Introduction.
(1) The study of world languages is an
essential part of education. In the 21st century language classroom, students
gain an understanding of two basic aspects of human existence: the nature of
communication and the complexity of culture. Students become aware of multiple
perspectives and means of expression, which lead to an appreciation of
difference and diversity. Further benefits of foreign language study include
stronger cognitive development, increased creativity, and divergent thinking.
Students who effectively communicate in more than one language, with an
appropriate understanding of cultural context, are globally literate and
possess the attributes of successful participants in the world
community.
(2) Communication is the
overarching goal of world language instruction. Students should be provided
ample opportunities to engage receptively and expressively in conversations, to
present information expressively to an audience, and to comprehend cultural and
linguistic aspects of the language. The American Council on the Teaching of
Foreign Languages (ACTFL) identifies three modes of communication:
interpersonal, interpretive, and presentational.
(A) In the interpersonal mode of
communication, students engage in direct signed communication with others
without voice. Examples of this "two-way" communication include but are not
limited to signing face to face or in a group discussion. Interpersonal
communication includes receptive and expressive skills.
(B) In interpretive (receptive) mode of
communication, students demonstrate understanding of receptively viewed
communication within appropriate cultural contexts. Examples of this type of
"one-way" receptive comprehension include but are not limited to ASL video
weblogs (or vlogs), other signed presentations, and signed DVD
conversations.
(C) In
presentational (expressive) mode of communication, students present information
in expressive form without voice to an audience of receptive listeners with
whom there is no immediate expressive interaction. Examples of this
"one-to-many" mode of communication include but are not limited to an
expressively signed presentation to a group or recorded in some way where there
is no receptive listener present to respond.
(3) The use of age-level appropriate and
culturally authentic resources is imperative to support the teaching of the
essential knowledge and skills for languages other than English (LOTE). The use
of culturally authentic resources in world language study enables students to
make connections with other content areas, to compare the language and culture
studied with their own, and to participate in local and global
communities.
(4) ASL difficulty has
been determined by standards of the Foreign Service Institute and Defense
Language Institute as a Level IV out of four (Level IV being the most
difficult). The American Sign Language Teachers Association (ASLTA) states the
challenge to ASL is primarily in the modality of learning. This conclusion is
based on the complex grammar system and significant structural and cultural
differences in the language. Students are generally seated in a semi-circle to
facilitate visual communication, notes cannot be taken without looking away
from the primary source of information, and instruction occurs in the target
language where learning is done spatially and words are not processed
sequentially. The linear nature of spoken language cannot be used in ASL and
the simultaneous expression of complex units is used. The level of difficulty
of ASL should be noted.
(5) While
other languages possess a spoken and/or written element, ASL incorporates
manual components with no verbal and/or written form. ASL is a fully developed
natural language that is used by members of the North American Deaf Community.
The language is distinct from gestures seen in spoken languages in that signs
used in ASL are controlled by the structures of its linguistic system,
independent of English. ASL encompasses all of the features that make a
language a unique, rule-governed communication system. ASL includes handshapes,
movements, and other grammatical features needed to form signs and sentences,
and parts combine to make wholes. It is not a simplified language and contains
structures and processes that English does not. The premise of Deaf culture is
rooted in the language itself and cannot be separated.
(6) ASL is a signed language where the modes
of communication involve different skills than written and/or spoken languages.
ASL is not a formal written language; glossing is the term used to describe a
chosen written system of symbols devised to transcribe signs and nonmanual
signals to an English equivalent. Since ASL information is received visually
and not in an auditory manner, communication skills in ASL are defined as
follows:
(A) interpretive listening and
reading targets are called interpretive receptive;
(B) one-to-one interpersonal targets are
called receptive and expressive; and
(C) one-to-many presentational speaking is
expressed through signs and the target is presentational expressive.
(7) Using age-appropriate
activities, students in ASL Level IV expand their ability to perform novice
tasks and develop their ability to perform the tasks of the
intermediate-to-advanced language learner. The intermediate-to-advanced
language learner, when dealing with everyday topics, should understand ASL
phrases receptively and respond expressively with learned material at an
intermediate-to-advanced proficiency level; sign learned words, concepts,
phrases, and sentences at an intermediate-to-advanced proficiency level; apply
acquired knowledge of Deaf cultural norms to the development of communication
skills; and apply knowledge of the components of ASL to increase accuracy of
expression. Students use expressive and receptive skills for
comprehension.
(8) ASL Level IV
proficiency levels, as defined by ACTFL and ASLTA, are as follows:
interpersonal receptive, intermediate high; interpersonal expressive, advanced
high; interpretive receptive, intermediate high; and presentational expressive,
advanced high.
(9) Students who
have fully or partially acquired the skills required at each proficiency level
through home or other immersion experiences are known as heritage speakers.
Heritage speakers may be allowed to accelerate based on their ability to
demonstrate a proficiency in the Texas essential knowledge and skills at the
prescribed proficiency level and communicate across all modes of communication.
According to ASLTA's National K-16 ASL Standards, "heritage language learning
is an emerging issue in ASL instruction. The formal instruction of ASL to deaf
is a very recent phenomenon, as is the availability of ASL instruction in K-12
settings for hearing children of deaf parents. Heritage language learning is an
important and developing interest in the field of ASL teaching and
learning."
(10) Statements
containing the word "including" reference content that must be mastered, while
those containing the phrase "such as" are intended as possible illustrative
examples.
(c) Knowledge and skills.
(1) Communication. The student
communicates in ASL using expressive and receptive communication skills without
voice. The student is expected to:
(A) engage
in a variety of ASL exchanges of learned material to socialize and to provide
and obtain information at an intermediate-to-advanced proficiency
level;
(B) demonstrate an
understanding of ASL such as stories, commands, and instructions when dealing
with familiar and unfamiliar topics;
(C) convey information in ASL using concepts,
classifiers, phrases, and sentences to others without voice at the
intermediate-to-advanced proficiency level;
(D) demonstrate appropriate usage of ASL
phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics at the
intermediate-to-advanced proficiency level; and
(E) create and express ASL literature,
including handshape stories, that follows traditional cultural
features.
(2) Cultures.
The student gains knowledge and understanding of American Deaf culture. The
student is expected to:
(A) apply ASL to
recognize and use Deaf cultural norms to demonstrate an understanding of the
perspectives of American Deaf culture;
(B) apply ASL to show evidence of
appreciation of ASL literature created by the Deaf and how it applies to the
perspectives of American Deaf culture;
(C) apply ASL to show evidence of
appreciation of the contributions to arts and sciences by the Deaf and how they
are applied to the perspectives of American Deaf culture; and
(D) demonstrate an in-depth understanding of
Deaf history and how it applies to the perspectives of American Deaf
culture.
(3)
Connections. The student uses ASL to make connections with other subject areas
and to acquire information. The student is expected to:
(A) use resources and digital technology to
gain access to extensive information on ASL and Deaf culture; and
(B) apply ASL at the intermediate-to-advanced
proficiency level to obtain, reinforce, or expand knowledge of other subject
areas.
(4) Comparisons.
The student expands insight into the nature of language and culture by
comparing the student's own language and culture to ASL and American Deaf
culture. The student is expected to:
(A)
apply ASL at the intermediate-to-advanced proficiency level to demonstrate an
understanding of the nature of language through comparisons of the student's
own language and ASL;
(B) apply ASL
at the intermediate-to-advanced proficiency level to demonstrate an
understanding of the nature of culture through comparisons of the student's own
culture and the American Deaf culture; and
(C) apply ASL at the intermediate-to-advanced
proficiency level to demonstrate an understanding of how one language and
culture can influence another.
(5) Communities. The student participates in
the Deaf/ASL community by using ASL. The student is expected to:
(A) apply ASL at the intermediate-to-advanced
proficiency level in or out of the school setting through involvement in
cultural activities such as attending Deaf events;
(B) use technology to communicate with the
Deaf/ASL community; and
(C) show
evidence of becoming a lifelong learner by using ASL at the
intermediate-to-advanced proficiency level for personal enrichment and career
development.
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