Deaf People Reading in Bilingual Contexts in Spanish Speaking Countries
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.4067/S0718-73782018000200079Keywords:
Deaf, Reading, Bilingualism, Syntax, EducationAbstract
This paper investigates different theories about the reading processes in deaf people, their problems, their advances and educational practices. For that, we have analyzed theoretical and empirical research papers in Spanish. After our analysis, we arrived at the conclusion that nowadays bilingualism is the main school of thought, even when there are different ideas about reading inside it: one of those ideas is about the acquisition of Spanish as a foreign language not only in the writing skills, without any participation of the oral language and other that, in opposition, consider that oral Spanish make it easier to learn how to read and write in that language. After this study, we think that vocabulary acquisition, phonological consciousness (in its visual variant), and syntaxes are important to develop reading skills in deaf people, that should be trained more systematically by the bilingual perspective. We also propose that logogenia is possibility of an alternative and accessory method for the syntax skills training involved in every reading and writing process. We also think that it is very important for deaf people to learn how to read and write in Spanish language, so they would have a better and fuller acquisition of scholar knowledge.
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2018 Revista Latinoamericana de Educación Inclusiva
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Creative Commons Reconocimiento (by)
Esta licencia permite la explotación de la obra, así como la creación de obras derivadas, la distribución de las cuales también está permitida con la condición de que se haga referencia expresa al autor/a, es decir, que aparezca su nombre en cualquier uso o acto de explotación que se haga de la obra.