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Watauga County Public Library
Hosts Sign Language Program
By Mike Shands
High Country residents can learn a different form
of communication this month at the Watauga County Public
Library.
Sign language instructor Liz Derrick will present a workshop
on the ABCs of the sign language alphabet Saturday, June
17 at 1 p.m. at the library.
Demonstrating
sign language symbols are, clockwise from left,
Tori Derrick with cow, Jenna Derrick
with tiger, Liz Derrick with horse
and Tristin Derrick with cat." Photos
by Mike Shands

Liz Derrick shows the sign language symbol
for I love you. She will present a program
on sign language at the library Saturday, June 17
at 1 p.m.
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The free program is open to all ages, but
teachers and adults will find it especially useful, Derrick
said.
I will do basic sign language plus the manual alphabet,
she said. I will also do some signs that children
enjoy, like animals.
Derrick said that the manual alphabet uses various finger
shape combinations to stand for the letters of the alphabet.
Spelling out each word using the manual alphabet is known
as the Rochester Method of sign language and is a laborious
way to communicate, she said.
Thats because a deaf person using the manual alphabet
to communicate would be the equivalent of a speaking person
spelling out a word, letter by letter, instead of simply
saying the word.
Sign language is a way of using finger and hand positions
to communicate. It is most commonly used by the deaf,
but many of those who can speak also use sign language
for various purposes.
In sign language, individual gestures are called signs.
Each sign has three parts: the hand shape, the position
of the hands and the movement of the hands.
Derrick said that various cultures have always used a
rudimentary form of sign language and that an organized
form of the communication was probably introduced in America
almost two centuries ago.
She also said that sign language is not universal
people who are deaf from different countries speak different
sign languages. In the United States there are a variety
of sign language forms in addition to the Rochester Method.
Probably the most rudimentary form is something Derrick
referred to as homemade sign language, which uses homemade
signs that would be different from those used by families
in other homes.
Signing Exact English (SEE) is an educational tool to
teach deaf children. Every word has a sign, and words
are signed in the same order and syntax as English. Derrick
said that this is also a laborious method of sign language
communication.
American Sign Language (ASL) is the most commonly used
sign language in the United States and is the indigenous
sign language of the deaf.
It uses the signs of SEE, but follows a different syntax
and word order. ASL also makes use of body language, facial
expressions and sign movement.
In essence it is an artistic language
that uses space to create a story or thought or anything
that we are able to capture with speech or written words,
Derrick said. American Sign Language has evolved
over time and is still evolving.
Many hearing people use something called Pigeon Sign Language
to communicate with the deaf because using ASLs
particular sign order and syntax can make it difficult
for them to sign and speak at the same time, Derrick said.
A gifted person who can speak English and sign ASL
at the same time is truly gifted, she said. It is
like people who are bilingual and can think in each or
both languages.
Not Just For The Deaf
Derrick said that sign language does have additional
uses as a non-verbal form of communication. One of the
most beneficial of those uses is as a way for parents
to communicate with their babies before the babies learn
to speak. She said that signing requires fewer muscles
than talking.
Its easier to learn sign language than to
talk, Derrick said. Our grandson was signing
100 signs before he was 1 year old. A lot of people do
it. (Babies) can learn the sign for milk, cookie, more
and many other things.
The more consistently you use sign language in the
home, the faster a baby will pick it up.
Decades Of Experience
The co-coordinator of the deaf and special needs
ministry at Mt. Vernon Baptist Church, Derrick also teaches
sign language to students and staff at Appalachian Christian
School. She taught sign language at the North Carolina
School for the Deaf in Morganton for 20 years and at Appalachian
State University for 25 years.
Derrick and her husband, Buck, had three hearing children,
then adopted two deaf children. They adopted a 22-month-old
deaf boy and later adopted a 13-and-½-year-old
deaf girl from Korea.
We had to communicate with our children so we learned
sign language with our 22-month-old, Derrick said.
The Derricks adopted daughter knew Korean sign language,
but not American Sign Language, so she had to learn that.
Sign language is not an international language,
Derrick said.
Fun Fact
Derrick said that at the Lincoln Memorial Monument
in Washington, D.C., one of Abraham Lincolns hands
is forming an A in sign language, and the
other is forming an L.
The library is located at 140 Queen St., on the corner
of Queen and Depot streets near downtown Boone. Call (828)
264-8784 or look online at www.arlibrary.org
for more information.
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