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Marshark, et.al., in the research you referred to, does recommend staying with a bilingual approach, but addressing language and literacy issues from more specific cognitive and information processing strategies specifically for the deaf. Which is basically what I have been saying all along. Yet, some people (?) tend to get upset when I suggest that the deaf have specific cognitive processing issues that need to be addressed.
That paraphrase of Marshark's quote is extremely misleading. You are attempting to take it out of context and, as a consequence, are missing the intent behind his statement.
That's a direct quote, not a paraphrase. Marschark has historically been very much pro-mainstream, but in recent years, the past decade, he's been emphasizing the need to address each child's situation independently and open to the possibilities of oral, TC, and bi-bi schools.
ARE DEAF STUDENTS’ READING CHALLENGES REALLY ABOUT READING?.
It's an interesting article, and you've pulled tangential bits and pieces from it in your previous post, but I don't think you addressed the full context, the subject of the paper, itself:
In brief, researchers conducted a series of experiments to explore possible similarities in college-aged deaf students’ comprehension of sign language and print, with the ultimate goal of improving learning though both media.
Passages were presented to deaf (signing) students in print or American Sign Language and to hearing students in print or auditorially. Several measures of learning indicated that the deaf students learned as much or more from print as they did from sign language, but less than hearing students in both cases, and this also applied to Deaf of Deaf subjects.
The researchers summarized their findings by suggesting that although deaf college students frequently might believe that they understand sign better than print, the reverse may be true. At least in the context of STEM content (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics), results from this and previous studies indicate that deaf students understand less of a signed lecture than they think they do, and may understand more—or at least learn more—from printed text than they think they do. The finding that learning via the reading of printed texts surpassed learning via sign language for deaf students had one exception: one of Marschark's experiments using real-time evanescent text-based instruction (a CART-like approach) provided positive results. More generally, the roots of learning difficulties for deaf students may lie in more general language comprehension processes than in what's been commonly assumed to be a reading issue, and that this difficulty is evident both in spoken and signed language approaches and might be improved through using multiple pathways.