For students of American Sign Language (ASL), the Signing Naturally curriculum is a gold standard. It bridges the gap between memorizing vocabulary and engaging in fluid, culturally appropriate conversation. However, as any student knows, working through the homework and understanding the why behind an answer is often more challenging than simply finding a key.
Imagine you are at a Deaf coffee shop. Your phone charger breaks. You need to borrow one. You don't know the sign for "charger." Using Unit 8.8 skills, you say: (Point to phone) + (CL:1 - long thin wire) + (CL:C - small round plug at the end) + (INFORMATION?) signing naturally unit 8.8 answer key
The Deaf person understands "long thin thing with a round plug for a phone" = Charger. You just succeeded without a dictionary or an answer key. For students of American Sign Language (ASL), the
Description: "Object. It is long, thin, metal. It has a pointed tip. It has a small hole at the other end. You use it with thread." A needle. Imagine you are at a Deaf coffee shop