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Understanding Science Through Captioning
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Understanding Science Through Captioning
The language of science is difficult for many children to
learn. But for those who are deaf or hard of hearing,
learning science can be even more challenging. The
unfamiliar words and concepts presented in science curricula
are particularly troublesome if students cannot hear the
correct terminology or use it in context.
For many of these students barriers to accessing
effective science education are threefold. First, lack of
time is a problem because deaf education tends to, for good
reason, emphasize language/communication training often at
the expense of subjects like science and math.
Second, traditional instructional media, namely
print-based material, pose a barrier because students with
hearing impairments frequently have reading and writing
deficiencies, but these same students tend to have enhanced
visual acuity. Therefore, an effective science curriculum
should integrate visual information whenever possible.
Finally, given the instructional challenges above, it is
not surprising that many children with hearing impairments
approach academics with apprehension. Instruction that
magnifies their limitations, such as context insensitive,
rote reading and writing, only enhances their self-doubt and
decreases their motivation. "Packaging" science in an
engaging way, by putting it in contexts that students who
are deaf can access and participate in, will make learning
interesting and fun for these students.
By addressing these barriers, CAST's Understanding Science Through
Captioning project sought to establish a model for improving science
education for students who are deaf or hearing impaired; this project
took one step toward helping these students be successful at--and perhaps
even pursue careers in--science.
The Project
The Understanding Science Through Captioning project (1997-99) used CAST's
video captioning software, ULTimate CaptionWorks™, to develop
an effective curriculum that enhances science achievement for students
who are deaf or hearing impaired. CaptionWorks allowed students
and teachers to caption any video material, including movies, TV shows,
news programs, educational films, and student-produced videos. The Understanding
Science Through Captioning project integrated this enabling technology
with an existing successful science curriculum and a pedagogical collaboration
with teachers of students who are deaf or hearing impaired for the purposes
of creating a science curriculum that would actively engage these children
in understanding science.
The project's goals were to:
- develop and implement strategies using video
captioning technology that enhance student science
achievement in three New England schools for the
deaf
- replicate the initial implementation in a school that
educates students with and without hearing
impairments
- disseminate the findings of the research along with
the enhanced curriculum and strategies for effective
implementation
The research design included students in four New England schools.
The Clarke School for the Deaf in Northampton, MA, the Rhode Island
School for the Deaf in Providence, RI, and the Horace Mann School for
the Deaf and Hard of Hearing in Boston, MA all serve students who are
deaf or hearing impaired and each participated in both project years.
A fourth school, the Silas Deane Middle School in Wethersfield, CT,
serves students with and without hearing impairments and was added at
the start of the project's second year. The Wethersfield Public School
system serves students who are deaf or hearing impaired through a collaboration
with the CREC/Soundbridge program of Connecticut.
Students in these four schools used portions of the Clarke School
for the Deaf Science Curriculum (a successful science program for students
who are deaf) combined with CaptionWorks to videotape hands-on
science experiments and then caption the videos themselves. Students
videotaped and captioned half the science experiments while performing
the other experiments by traditional methods. CAST researchers hypothesized
that by "revisiting" the experiments on videotape, and by writing about
them in the captions, students would become more engaged in learning
and more successful at integrating the concepts and language of science.
Project Outcomes
Project findings are currently being disseminated through conference presentations
and publications. An executive summary for researchers
and a teacher's handbook for educators are both available on this website.
Project staff anticipate that the implications of this project will
go well beyond schools for students who are deaf or hearing impaired.
The ideas laid out in project publications will be important for students
who are deaf in mainstream classrooms, as well as for their peers with
or without disabilities. These strategies will provide powerful supports
to teachers in the mainstream who need to understand how to address
the barriers faced by students who are deaf and hearing impaired and
how to better support these students as they learn the language of science.
Funding
Funding for the Understanding Science Through Captioning project was
provided by the National Science Foundation's Program for Persons with
Disabilities, NSF Grant No. HRD-9712964. The Foundation's mission is
to promote and advance scientific progress in the United States.
Page updated April 11, 2003

© 1999-2009 CAST,
40 Harvard Mills Square, Foundry Street,
Wakefield, MA 01880-3233,
USA.
Telephone: +1 (781) 245-2212
Email:
cast@cast.org
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