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ASL102 Description

Course Title

Learning American Sign Language II

Overview of Course

Ten dialogs introduce over 200 new ASL signs. The dialogs cover common phrases used to talk about the family and relatives, terminology popular in the Deaf community, and common means of communicating with a Deaf person including the use of a TTY which allows Deaf people to have conversations over a phone line. The dialogs cover a wide range of ASL sentence structures that will help beginning signers communicate more comfortably in ASL. Information about the lives of people in the Deaf community is presented in each of the ten lessons. Topics covered include Deaf people from different countries communicating in sign language with one another, truths and misconceptions about lipreading, hearing loss, strategies Deaf people use to get someone’s attention, closed captioning in theaters, hearing dogs, how parts of a sign can be altered so that the meaning of a sign changes, and a popular Deaf joke.

Overview of Lessons

Lesson Title/Theme Dialog Grammar Vocabulary Culture
1 Talking about your family Asking questions about someone’s family. Noun/adjective structures: Placement of numbers. Negation. Question seeking information Immediate family signs. Numbers. How do Deaf people learn ASL?
2 More about the family Describing where someone lives. Pointing in space (indexic referencing). Topic/comment sentence. Signs related to where someone lives. Pronouns. How do Deaf people from different countries talk to each other if countries have different sign languages?
3 What the family does Talking about a profession. Pointing in space. Topic/comment sentence. Simple sentence. Verb + person marker. Directional verb-sign. Why don’t Deaf people just lipread instead of signing?
4 Relations Describing the size of one’s family Topic/comment sentence. Information seeking question. Signs related to family and relatives. American Sign Language: Movement of the hand
5 Deaf family member How to correct a misunderstanding in a conversation. Topic/comment sentence. Noun/adjective technique. Directional verb-sign. Facial clues. Three directional verb-signs. Signs for relatives. A word about hearing loss.
6 Communicating in signs and other ways Conversation about the use of a TTY Topic/comment sentence. Simple sentence. Complex sentence. TTY related signs. What is a TTY?
7 How to communicate with a Deaf person Conversation about signing and fingerspelling. Conditional sentence. Time line. Topic/comment sentence. Age. Conditional sign SUPPOSE. Attention getting behavior in the Deaf community
8 More signs from the Deaf community Questions for talking about the Deaf community. Rhetorical question. Use of the sign FINISH. ASL signs common in discussions about the Deaf community Captioning in movie theaters.
9 Talking about transportation Transportation related conversation. Topic/comment sentence. Negation. Simple sentence. Directional verb-sign. Transportation related signs. Negative incorporation. Deaf joke: The train trip.
10 Until next time Talking about someone who didn’t show up as expected. Negation. Simple sentence. Facial clues. Negative signs. Hearing dogs used by Deaf people

Lesson Organization

Each lesson is based on seven easy steps:

  1. Learning the Signs
    There is a dialog between two people in each lesson. You are shown how to sign each ASL sign used in the dialog.

  2. Creating Sentences
    Each dialog is separated into sentences. A clear description is given of how the sentences are translated from English to ASL. You are shown how to sign each sentence.

  3. The Complete Dialog
    You watch and practice a dialog between two Deaf signers.

  4. Additional Signs
    Each lesson has additional signs for you to learn that are not in the dialog.

  5. Practice Activities
    Practice activities help you exercise your new knowledge of ASL. You translate English sentences to ASL. After you have done this, a single click shows you one way for the signing the sentence in ASL.

  6. Quiz
    Take the quiz to find out if you are ready to move on to the next lesson.

  7. Culture Information
    Each lesson ends with information about Deaf people and the way they live. This section provides insight and motivation for helping you learn ASL.

Final Exam and Certificate

After completion of the lessons, you can take the final exam for the course to test your newly learned ASL knowledge. Upon successfully passing the final exam, you will earn a certificate of completion. The certificate will be mailed to you to mark your accomplishment.

Continuing Education

Educator CEUs - If you are an educator, you can take the above courses for Continuing Education Units (CEUs) for an additional $20 per course. The CEUs are issued by the Michigan Department of Education through Michigan State University. You earn 1.5 CEUs per course. To receive CEUs, you must log 15 hours online and fill out a CEU completion form upon completion of a course.

Nursing CEs - If you are a nurse, you can take the above courses for Continuing Nursing Education Contact Hours (CEs) for an additional $20 per course. The CEs are issued by Michigan State University College of Nursing, which is approved as a provider of continuing nursing education by the Michigan Nurses Association, an accredited approver of continuing nursing education by the American Nurses Credentialing Center Commission on Accredtitation. You earn 18 contact hours per course. To receive CEs, you must log 15 hours online and fill out a CEU completion form upon completion of a course.

Tools to Help You Learn

With your enrollment, you receive complete access to several useful tools and resources to aid you in your learning, including:

  • Dictionary
    You have quick access to nearly 2000 ASL signs.

  • Fingerspelling
    ASL uses a manual alphabet where a different handshape is used to represent each letter of the alphabet. These handshapes can be seen at anytime.

  • Numbers
    ASL uses different handshapes to represent numbers. These handshapes can be seen at anytime.

  • Glossary
    At the click of a button you can refresh your memory about ASL rules and signing techniques.

How long does it take?

You are given four months to complete the course. The time it takes to complete the course will vary depending on your previous experience with sign language, ASL, and your own learning style.

With that said, the site will pace you so you can take at most one lesson per day. Each lesson should take you about 1-2 hours of online time. Therefore, a complete course would take 10 days, taking on average around 15-20 hours total to complete.

How much does it cost?

The cost to take this online course is $49.95. ($69.95 if taking to earn CEUs or CEs)

For a limited time, if you enroll in more than one course at a time, the course access duration will be extended and you will get a multi-course discount on the cost.

How do I enroll?

You can enroll via our secure, online enrollment process.

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