About The Blue Lobster
From the same team who created the award-winning ASL/English bilingual storybook app, The Baobab, we bring you The Blue Lobster! Another fun and original story, The Blue Lobster is about a curious little girl who goes in search for a rare lobster!
Designed for early and emerging readers, The Blue Lobster puts additional emphasis on colors, animals, and the environment. The Blue Lobster also features four added bonus pages for parent-child interaction.
Children and parents will benefit from the rich American Sign Language storytelling, original watercolor illustrations, and from the signed and finger spelled vocabulary words.
Key Research Principles:
The benefits of bilingualism--for both hearing and deaf language learners--have become more and more apparent in recent years. We know from research that a child’s early exposure to bilingualism provides fundamental advantages in cognition, language, and literacy. This finding is true for bilinguals whose languages are both spoken and for bilinguals who sign one language and read and write in another. In fact, this early bilingual advantage does not go away; research confirms that the cognitive and language benefits that come from being bilingual continue throughout the lifetime.
The new series of VL2 ASL-English storybook apps for the iPad builds upon findings from research done on deaf bilingual children. For one, we know that proficiency in a visual language, American Sign Language, has been positively correlated with English literacy and spoken language development. Opportunities that provide engagement with visual language and printed literacy place deaf children on a path towards fluent bilingualism.
By being exposed to examples of extended use of sign language (such as stories), deaf children are provided opportunities to develop cognitive flexibility and metalinguistic abilities, and these, in turn, help to facilitate the development of English literacy skills. Research from VL2 and other centers shows that early visual language experience offers far-reaching advantages for a deaf child’s linguistic, communicative, cognitive, academic, literacy, and psychosocial development.
Children, parents, and educators who use this app can watch the story in ASL, read along with the English text at the bottom of the screen, and watch videos--with sound--of the translation of selected words in the text. A rich body of work in early literacy indicates that fingerspelling helps vocabulary acquisition and helps form a phonological level of language access for deaf children. The apps make use of the advantages of fingerspelling, even incorporating commonly used linking techniques such as “sandwiching,” where a word is signed, then fingerspelled, and then signed once again. Because of what we know about the importance of fluent language models in the teaching of the grammar of a visual language, the storyteller in The Blue Lobster is a fluent signer.
For more information: www.VL2StorybookApps.com
by J####:
Text often runs off the screen, making it unreadable.