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How to Travel When You Don't Speak the LanguageASL interpreter Anna Mindess has another way: She uses her hands to communicate, to travel to places where she encounters language barriers-and break them. Here are her tips. On a recent trip to ...
Klingenberg began teaching American Sign Language at Duke last fall, with students now taking either ASL 101 or 102. Even if ...
“You don’t have to travel to be immersed. [The language] brings people together.” Klingenberg began teaching American Sign Language at Duke last fall, with students now taking either ASL 101 or 102.
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