OLAC Record
oai:soas.ac.uk:MPI1041522

Metadata
Title:Eating and chatting
CSG2may7
Contributor:Ketut Kanta
Contributor (researcher):Connie de Vos
Contributor (speaker):P2
P3
SB
RD
KB
NG
SU
SA
PU
SY
Coverage:Indonesia
Date:2007-05-02
Description:The girls (P2 and P3) are interacting with hearing children of the same ages, eating, and chatting with the grandparents at the family's compound in the village.
The first language acquisition setting in Bengkala is rather distinct from urban signing communities in which 90-95% of deaf children are estimated to be born to hearing parents that do not (initially) know how to sign. By contrast, the deaf children who are the focus of this study have deaf parents, deaf grandparents, older deaf siblings, and deaf uncles, aunts, and cousins, and lives in a compound with many fluent hearing adults and children. As a result, the children learn to sign in an environment which is rich in sign language input in comparison to most deaf children that grow up in urban signing communities. In terms of linguistic input, the sociolinguistic setting in which deaf children in deaf villages acquire sign language is thus remarkably similar to that in which hearing children acquire spoken languages. As such, the study of first language acquisition of village sign languages may inform our understanding of the effects of modality – the medium of language – in the domain of acquisition irrespective of additional factors such as the diversity and amount of linguistic input. In the Kata Kolok child signing subproject deaf children growing up in a rich signing environment are recorded every 2 weeks if possible. Recordings are made at their homes or other familiar places within the village with caregivers (parents, siblings) and other people (e.g. hearing but fluently signing neighbours). During the project a few hearing children who grow up in deaf families were also recorded.
Only child of PI. Cousin of P1-P2-P3 and R1
Daughter of SA. Signer worked as a house cleaner in other areas of Bali.
This signer belongs to the oldest generation of Kata Kolok signers currently alive. Her brother (GT) and two sisters (KS and CD) are also deaf.
Son of SA and KB.
Son of SA
This signer belongs to the oldest generation of Kata Kolok signers currently alive.
Signer was married to an Indonesian Sign Language user for a short while, and for this reason has limited knowledge of the language.
Format:video/x-mpeg2
text/x-eaf+xml
DV
Identifier:oai:soas.ac.uk:MPI1041522
CS
Identifier (URI):https://lat1.lis.soas.ac.uk/ds/asv?openpath=MPI1041522%23
Publisher:Connie de Vos
Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics
Subject:Discourse
Conversation
Unspecified
Undetermined language
Kata Kolok
Subject (ISO639):und
Type:Video

OLAC Info

Archive:  Endangered Languages Archive
Description:  http://www.language-archives.org/archive/soas.ac.uk
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for OLAC format
GetRecord:  Pre-generated XML file

OAI Info

OaiIdentifier:  oai:soas.ac.uk:MPI1041522
DateStamp:  2017-03-09
GetRecord:  OAI-PMH request for simple DC format

Search Info

Citation: Connie de Vos (researcher); Ketut Kanta; P2 (speaker); P3 (speaker); SB (speaker); RD (speaker); KB (speaker); NG (speaker); SU (speaker); SA (speaker); PU (speaker); SY (speaker). 2007-05-02. Connie de Vos.
Terms: iso639_und

Inferred Metadata

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Up-to-date as of: Mon Oct 18 15:20:44 EDT 2021