Communication and Culture: Implications for Hispanic Mothers with Deaf Children
Abstract (Summary)
The majority of deaf children are born to hearing parents. The fact that many of these children use sign language as their primary form of communication poses a unique language barrier between them and their hearing families. In addition, for children who are born into Hispanic families, these children have limited access to Hispanic and Deaf cultures unless their families actively pursue involvement with those communities. Data were collected through ethnographic interviews and limited participant observation and analyzed by means of grounded theory methodology. The study investigated how Hispanic mothers communicate with their deaf children who use ASL as their primary language, as well as how these mothers view Deafness as a culture.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:Elizabeth Harry; Batya Elbaum; Marjorie Montague; Alexandra Quittner
School:University of Miami
School Location:USA - Florida
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:teaching and learning education
ISBN:
Date of Publication:12/12/2007