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American Sign Language Evaluation Essay

968 Words4 Pages

The article I chose to evaluate is written by Amanda Morris, published by the New York Times, and titled “How a Visual Language Evolves as Our World Does”. This article details examples of American Sign Language (ASL) signs throughout the years, explains how technology has affected the language as a result of needing to fit signs within the screen of a phone, as well as how technology allows signs to be adapted and common in less time than ever before. In order to evaluate this article, I knew the currency, relevancy, authority, accuracy, and purpose of the article would need to be assessed based on the CRAAP test.
Currency is the first part of the CRAAP acronym and is used to determine when the article was written and if the information is …show more content…

Amanda Morris has written for many news organizations, most recently at The New York Times, where this article was published. Before her career began, she received a degree from New York University after majoring in journalism, as well as media culture and communications; these degrees gave her the authority and opportunity to begin working on news articles. Her authority continued to show as she wrote this specific article. Morris is part of a deaf family and has been fluent in ASL almost all of her life. She uses hearing aids to help her communicate when needed, but generally uses sign language as her communication technique. The article is published on a credible website and with her experience with sign language, she is qualified to write about how it has changed over the years she has known it. These reasons allowed me to give another pass on the CRAAP …show more content…

After looking at the website, reading the article, and discussing the author’s personal interest in sign language, I concluded that the main idea of this article is to entertain the reader, as well as offer information about the evolution of ASL. Morris does well at remaining unbiased throughout her article and is not advertising or encouraging sign language. However, the interviews she used consist of opinions of the recent changes to ASL. This purpose does not fulfill the potential need when writing an academic paper, so I decided to, yet again, fail this part of the CRAAP

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