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Unit 6 – IX-you NEED WHAT What do you need?

Clip 0.6: Topic-comments sentences

Transcript

Topic-comment sentences

As you know, the world if full of different languages, each with their own words, rules, grammar. Like any language, New Zealand Sign Language has its own grammar, too, including rules about word order.

Some of these rules are the same as English, while others are quite different.

One of the most obvious rules about New Zealand Sign Language word order relates to a sequence called "topic-comment".

This means the sentence begins with the topic you want to discuss and ends with the comment about that topic.

The tricky thing can be knowing when the topic ends and the comment is beginning.

New Zealand Sign Languages does this through the use of NMS – non-manual signals, facial expressions.

Have a look at some examples. Try and catch how the signers show the separation between the topic and comment parts of their sentence.

As you can see, for topic-comment sentences, when signing the topic, raise your eyebrows then return them to normal for the comment.

Perhaps you also notice that when signing the topic, the signer holds the last topic sign a bit longer before lowering their eyebrows back to normal and signing the comment part.

The topic-comment word order is used a lot in New Zealand Sign Language, so it's a good idea to practice them.

Vocabulary – feelings, needs, wants

The students will learn some vocabulary for expressing feelings, needs, and wants.

Open up a discussion with the students where they can explore and reflect on how people express their feelings, needs, and wants in different cultures through either language or particular behaviours, for example, facial expressions or body positions.

Lead the discussion in ways that avoid stereotypical thinking and descriptions. Focus on particular situations that enable them to make comparisons with practices they use or observe in others. For example, how would they themselves explain, or show, that they are sad, hungry, or tired? How do they know that others are feeling sad, hungry, or tired?

Saying hello and goodbye

As the Deaf community in New Zealand is relatively small and most people in it know each other, members find that they are able to express their feelings and needs to each other more quickly and more openly than if they were meeting for the first time.

A good example of this is hugging. In Deaf culture, it is normal to hug people when saying hello and goodbye whether you know them well or not.

In fact, saying goodbye to everyone at a party consists of up to an hour of hugging and signing to them! Deaf goodbyes are usually drawn out, and not taking time to chat for a few minutes, even in passing, is considered rude.

As they move between, and respond to, different languages and different cultural practices, they [the students] are challenged to consider their own identities and assumptions.

The New Zealand Curriculum (2007) page 24

Learning vocbulary for feelings, needs, and wants

Tell your students that they will learn vocabulary that they can use to express feelings, needs, and wants. Play Clip 6.1a: What do you need?. Ask the students to imitate the vocabulary, using the presenters as their models. Replay the clip several times until the students can reproduce the signs confidently.

On a copy of Worksheet 6.1 blank out the English descriptors beneath the signs. Photocopy the modified worksheet and hand out copies to the students. Tell them to write the English word beneath each sign, using their learning from clip 6.1. Then show them the original worksheet so that they can check and correct their responses.

Now repeat this process with Clip 6.1b: What do you need? and Worksheet 6.2.

Communicating feelings
Tell the students that they will view a dialogue in which people are communicating about feelings, needs, and wants. Play Scene G – Time-out. Ask the students to work out what they can understand from the dialogue using their current knowledge of NZSL, including what they have just learned.

Discuss their understanding. You have the Scene G transcript to help you lead the discussion.

Now replay scene G so that the students can check their own understanding and use the discussion points to understand more of what is being communicated.

Reveiwing what's been learned
Play clip 6.1a and clip 6.1b again to refresh the students’ knowledge of the vocabulary and have them take turns to practise signing the words with a partner to build their signing accuracy and fluency.

Making comparisons and connections between languages

The students will learn more about sentence patterns and glossing.

NZSL sentences sometimes have a word order that’s different from that used in English. Sign language sentence structures are more flexible than those in English. Show these two sentence patterns to the students. Plain sentences follow the subject-verb-object order, as in English. Sentences that start with a topic followed by a comment are known as topic-comment sentences.

Use the grammatical name for each sentence pattern, as shown here, when discussing these patterns with your students. Play Clip 6.2c: Topic-Comment sentences to show these.

I play cricket.

IX-me PLAY CRICKETnod

I play cricket.

CRICKETtIX-me PLAYnod

I like rugby.

IX-me LIKE RUGBYnod

I like rugby.

RUGBYtIX-me LIKEnod

Display the following sentences. Tell students to find a partner and work out how to express the same idea in NZSL using the topic-comment sentence pattern.

  • Do you need sleep?
  • I need a hug.
  • I want to play.
  • I like sports.

You will find further information on the topic-comment comments in NZSL on Clip 0.6: Tocpic-Comment sentences.

Hand out copies of the Unit 6 sentence patterns to your students. Challenge them to find examples of the topic-comment sentence pattern. Explain that the notation ___t indicates the topic (what the sentence is about) and that the eyebrows are raised.

Other glossing conventions
Point out other glossing conventions to the students. For example:

  • capital letters are used for words that have a sign
  • having a + after a sign indicates the number of repeats, as in BEAT ++++
  • IX refers to a pointing finger
  • IX-me indicates that the finger points to the person who is signing
  • the line above the glossing and the notation, for example, TIME WHATwhq, indicates a non-manual signal and, in this case, a wh-question.

Play Clip 6.2a: Congratulations and Clip 6.2b: What do you need? for the students to observe how these glossing conventions relate to the different ways the language is expressed.

Communicating needs and wants

The students will communicate their needs and wants.

Play Scene H – Winner takes all several times and use a copy of the Scene H transcript to check your students’ understanding.

Repeated viewing of the clips and scenes will help your students to monitor they own ways of responding to what they see. This will increase their experience of “reading” for meaning and their confidence.

Tell your students to refer to vocabulary Worksheet 6.1 and Worksheet 6.2. In pairs, they practise their signing, reviewing the vocabulary they will need to use. To assist them in their practice, play "What do you need?" Clip 6.1a and Clip 6.1b.

Hand out Worksheet 6.3. Play Clip 6.2a and Clip 6.2b a number of times and have them model their signing on what they see.

Ask the students to work in pairs or groups to make up a role-play using the language patterns on the worksheet. Tell them that they can include any language they know from earlier units but that the focus needs to be on communicating feelings, needs, and wants.

Give them time to practise so that they can develop a good level of fluency. Repay clips 6.2a and 6.2b several times to ensure that they have a model to follow as they develop their language skills.

Have the students present their role-plays to other groups or to the whole class.

Ask the students viewing the performances to respond to the presenters to show their interest and appreciation. They could applaud (by waving their hands in the air) or sign “thumbs up”.

Assessing progress

The students will assess their own role-play presentations.

In assessing the learners’ proficiency when they learn another language, it is important to examine free as well as controlled production. This activity pays attention to these two elements.

Determine the confidence level of your students. Based on this, choose one of the followng tasks.

Role-play a scene viewed
Hand out copies of the Scene G transcript or Scene H transcript. Divide the students into groups, making sure there are enough people in each group to role-play the scene. Have them share out the roles within each group. Play Scene G and/or Scene H. Replay the scene(s) as many times as needed for all the students to learn their parts well.

Make-up your own, original role-play
Divide the students into groups. Tell them to make up their own role-plays using Worksheet 6.1Worksheet 6.2, and Worksheet 6.3 as reference tools. Play Clip 6.2a and Clip 6.2b to provide good models and ideas. Then allow enough time for them to create their role-plays and practise them. This may take several lessons.

Assessing the role-plays

The first task is "controlled production", that is, a task where the students are required to use prescribed content. The focus of the assessment is therefore on their delivery. In this case, use only selected assessment criteria from those provided in Unit 10, as follows.

When communicating in NZSL, students will show that they can:

  • sign well enough for others to understand what they are communicating
  • respond to questions, and sign sentences, without hesitating too much.

The second task is "free production", that is, a task in which the students create the content for themselves using their prior learning. Use the full set of assessment criteria from Unit 10.

Give them time to apply the criteria to their own performance and discuss their assessments with each other. Monitor the outcomes of their assessment as their conclusions and your observations will help you to determine which aspects of the unit need further emphasis so that the students can manage the task well.

Reflecting on learning

Replay a clip from any of the previous units or Unit 6 activities. Encourage a reflective discussion among the students on what they have been learning. Focus the discussion points on:

  • how they perceive their progress to date
  • the aspects of learning NZSL that they find particularly interesting
  • the aspects of learning NZSL that they find particularly challenging.

Their responses will continue to provide you with information that directs the focus of your lesson planning.

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