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Author Topic: baby sign language Australia  (Read 4624 times)
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Kimba15
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« on: January 01, 2009, 10:43:20 AM »

Hi all Aussie parents,

I thought i would start a new thread to talk about baby sign language is Australia.I don't know if many of you know that Baby sign language in America and BAby sign language in Australia are based on two different 'sign languages'

America is based on the french version of sign language ( 1 hand to make signs)
Australia is based on thr British version of sign language.( 2 hands to make signs)

Australia uses a form of sign language called AUSLAN which is what baby sign language is based off.

Sign Language in Australia also varies from state to state so if you sign something to a hearing impaired person in Queensland you would have to learn different signs in Victoria to get the same message across.

MAny schools in Queensand, Particularly Toowong now use AUSLAN when they are teaching their students. The children begin learning sign language in reception and continue through to year 7, and the children end up fluent in sign languge. There have been many studies done on the benefits of teaching sign language
This is something taken from the australian baby hands website
Hearing Students, Sign Language, and Music: A Valuable Combination


For many years now it has been widely recognized that students benefit from being encouraged to move to music. In this brief essay I wish to propose that the use of American Sign Language (ASL) with hearing children may be a beneficial form of such movement. My reasons for making this suggestion stem from the proven value of using bodily movement in teaching music, especially applications of the “Dalcroze Method,” and the proven effectiveness of signing in teaching language arts to children who have no hearing impairments.

As early as the 1800’s, some educators working with children who had hearing impairments advocated that Sign language be taught to children without such an impairment, because they noticed that the hearing siblings of deaf children often developed better skills in reading, spelling, and writing if they were exposed to Sign language at home. Teachers who knew Sign language and used it while teaching in the classroom observed that children paid greater attention to the lesson. Music teachers noticed that children paid greater attention and learned lyrics better, if the teacher were signing while singing the text. They further observed that children seemed able to recall lyrics more readily, even weeks or months later, if the music educator used Sign while teaching.

Few educators today will raise an objection to the introduction of “Sign” or “signing,” the nearly universal terms for skill in the use of American Sign, for use by children who do not have a hearing impairment. In addition to the advantages noted above, additional benefits to using Sign language with hearing children include the fact that even the most rudimentary knowledge of Sign allows some level of communication with the hearing impaired community, and many hearing impaired students are being “mainstreamed” into regular classrooms. Next, a knowledge of Sign allows the hearing student to develop a beginning awareness of the linguistic richness of Sign language and, thus, of language in general. Indeed, some have argued that American Sign

Language is not merely English conveyed by signs, but something more: a unique cultural heritage and a fully developed language having its own syntax and rules. While some educators presume, because of the reasons just given, that the use of Sign language is useful in teaching vocabulary, phonics, and language arts, as well as in classroom management.

Similar arguments are made for the use of bodily movement and dance in educational programs, especially but not solely in the process of teaching music. The combination of music and movement, some educators noted at the end of the nineteenth century, seems to lead to an improved understanding of other subjects. For instance, in the early 1900’s Emile Jacques- Dalcroze, the leading theoretician of this approach, wrote:
“Twenty years ago I wrote some little songs, and set children to punctuate them with bodily movements. I frequently noticed that children who did not care for music, and detested singing, came to love the songs through their love of the movements.”

Dalcrose theorized that lessons in rhythmic gymnastics helped children in their other lessons, for they seemed to develop keener powers of observation and analysis, greater understanding and more acute memory. Teachers of subjects other than music, according to Dalcroze, often found that rhythmic training to music made students more responsive, more elastic, not only in movement but in personality.
More recently, Phyllis Weikart, another theoretician and practitioner, has written that movement in music helps young children succeed in school because it can aid in providing basic coordination skills for the young child who is still mastering the coordination of physical movement; it can aid in developing the child’s awareness of the body as a unique physical object occupying time and space; it can strengthen aural comprehension and visual perception skills; it creates an awareness of “basic timing” as the child learns to move to the beat; and, it aids in the development of a positive self-concept.

Movement, Music, Sign:

Given the proven advantages of learning and using Sign, it is possible that music instruction may be one of the best methods to introduce students to Sign, because it is an educational form that involves the body more than most and, given the proven advantages of bodily movement to music education, it is quite likely that skill in signing what they sing will enrich students’ appreciation of music and may well enhance their performance in other courses. Young people have an abundance of energy and most of them love to mimic physical movements. These natural levels of energy and talent allow students to learn quickly the relationship of signs to words.

I am not suggesting that the music teacher has to become proficient in ASL. There are some simple songs that might well be learned partially in Sign. In teaching songs having repeated key words, as do many folk songs and songs for children, or a refrain, it is possible to have the students learn to sign only the key word or possibly the entire refrain. The booklet Signing for Reading Success shows teachers how easy it is to learn some Sign language without ever taking a course. In many communities it is also possible to identify a practitioner of American Sign to function as a resource person.

The music teacher who is willing to explore the use of Sign in music may well be in for some surprising dividends. Barb Rogers, a teacher at Kinzie School in Chicago, asserts that her students learned music better because of Sign. She states that her classes watched the video Sign Songs twice and knew the songs thereafter. However, her students came with some familiarity with Sign, for Kinzie School mainstreams more than one hundred hearing impaired students.

Students who are learning songs together are often participating in a relatively new experience of working cooperatively. Learning signs with words and music enhances the beauty of the song’s performance. Sign can improve the motor skills of young people, and indeed it is good exercise for people of all ages. In his classic statement of the theory of eurythmics, Rhythm Music & Education, Jacques-Dalcroze suggests that movement with music might be beneficial in preparing students to play instruments with greater dexterity.

Preparing for the Future:

Lastly, I wish to suggest another but perhaps more somber benefit of introducing general music students to sign at an early age. We are now very much aware of hearing loss among the general population owing to exposure to blaring rock music, to say nothing of the damage to hearing from the general noise pollution existing in our cities and industrial areas. An introduction to Sign may very well enable students, should they suffer severe hearing loss, to pick this language up again without difficulty later in life.

Music classes are a part of general education for life, and they have always concentrated on the joy of hearing. It is possible that music combined with Sign may make a contribution beyond the joy of hearing and keep communication skills alive, even when hearing is no longer possible.

Copyright 1995 Steve Kokette. For further information, you can visit Steve’s site at http://www.signit2.com/

There are 3 main websites that promote babysign language
which are
www.tinytalk.com.au
www.australianbabyhands.com.au
www.everybabysigns.com.au

I woud like to here people's opinion on which one they use and what benefits theey have had with it.

I use tinytalk I have found it very easy to use and follow but i am keen to continue on with signing even after Sophia starts to drop signs and move into AUSLAN.

How about you

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mtb999
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« Reply #1 on: March 19, 2009, 02:31:39 AM »

Hi Kimba15,
I want to teach my baby sign language too (mum-to-be).  I have bought the tiny-talk and australian baby hands books, and also borrowed the tiny-talk DVD from my local library.  I am undecided whether to teach American Sign Language - as I have found a great book - and also it is convenient to use one hand when you're holding your bub in your other arm ... or Auslan.  A friend of mine has used Auslan (uncertain which of the 3 websites/authors they used) and it's been great for their kid.
While my response doesn't answer your question ... I was wondering how you've found teaching and communicating in Auslan?  I too am keen to continue using it as my baby grows older, as a tool for introducing another language too.

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rose08
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« Reply #2 on: March 22, 2009, 11:34:24 PM »

Hi i didnt know that we had a different sign language to america although it does make sense. I do like one handed signing better as it is easier for me to do as i hold my baby. Thanks for the websites, i found one on signing but it wasnt very good. smile

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Kimba15
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« Reply #3 on: March 23, 2009, 06:11:13 AM »

Hi Mtb999 and rose08.

To answer your questions mtb999

1. I would use AUSLAN over ASL because AUSLAN is the national 'sign language' and if you continue to use sign language when your baby is older you will have to teach the baby AUSLAN anyway so he/she will be unable to communicate with the deaf. If your baby uses ASL to a hearing impaired person it will be like speaking french to a person who only knows english.

2. The signs that I have elected to teach so far are 'milk', 'eat/food/hungry' (same sign for three words) 'drink' and more. Mainly because the first three signs only require one hand and more requires two. I use the 'more' sign when she is having solids because my hands are free and I have recently introduced the 'more' sign when she is having milk as I dont really have to hold the bottle for her that much anymore.

3. As to date sophia has not signed back yet but does recognise the signs for milk and food but not the other yet, I have been far more consistant with the first two. Also I have only just introduced the sign 'drink' because Sophia has just started having water, and the sign must be used in context. For example would you like some 'milk' (sign milk) Are you enjoying your 'milk' etc etc.  Milk is also a great sign to begin with because you can use it when you are breastfeeding.

4. How have I found teaching baby sign language with Auslan. Good and bad. Good because I know she is learning something that will benefit her for the rest of her life. Also I know that im teaching something that I can continue on with her as she gets older. Its something that Sophia can gain on and I can learn with her.  Bad because like you said it can be inconvieniant to have to use both hands. It would have been much easier to use one universal sign language and that system should have been the french system that america has adopted and I find it hard to remember to sign all the time even though I am only teaching her four words at the moment.

5. Another great website is www.bilby.net

I hope this helps you.

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Nikita
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« Reply #4 on: April 06, 2009, 04:21:21 AM »

Teaching Aussie babies Auslan is a good idea because they may well learn that in LOTE (Language other than english) at school, so they'll be ahead. I plan to teach both ways.

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mtb999
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« Reply #5 on: April 06, 2009, 06:00:32 AM »

It would be good if there were easily accessible classes for parents to learn sign language prior to having their babies!  Does anyone know of where to go to for lessons?

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