STENOTYPE: The
American Sign Language (ASL) sign for "stenotype / stenography"
Notes:
Question:
Regarding the 25:53 mark of the YouTube video titled: "American Sign Language (ASL)
Lesson 13 (Katelyn) (1080p)" at the
https://YouTube.com/billvicars channel, a student named Synamon comments to
ask:
Hi Dr. Bill what is the sign at
25:53 referencing? The skill to type fast? Thank you!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Yf6AMlBm0XY&t=25m50s
Response:
Synamon,
Hello! By asking your question you have earned a history micro-lesson.
You have taken note of an awesome old sign for a device called a stenotype.
Google "stenotype" and check out some of the pics.
These days when one of us Deaf attends college and requests a notetaker from the
Office for Students with Disabilities they typically send someone with a laptop
and skill in typing fast.
In the "old days" when we asked for a notetaker they used to hand us this messy
blue "carbon" paper for us to hand to a classmate to place under their notes
page while writing their own notes. Then when they got done they would hand you
back the carbon paper and the paper under that which now had a blue "copy" of
the classmate's notes.
However, sometimes the approach was to send a stenographer with a stenotype to
take notes. Courtroom stenographers would "moonlight" (work a second job) as
college notetakers for Deaf students. Thus for many years the sign for "typing
on a stenotype" was also commonly used to refer to a type of "notetaker" or "notetaking."
Many younger Deaf probably don't even recognize that "stenography" sign any more
because classroom notetakers tend to use laptops.
If you would like to see a real-life stenotype just commit a crime serious
enough to get yourself hauled into a courtroom and you may be lucky and that
courtroom might still be using a stenographer!
Um...wait... maybe just stick to Googling the images.
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