Parallel and divergent interpreting in an elementary school classroom

Autor/a: WOLBERS, Kimberly; et al.
Año: 2012
Editorial: American Annals of the Deaf, Vol. 157, nº 1 (2012) pp. 48–65
Tipo de código: Copyright
Soporte: Digital

Temas

Traducción e Interpretación

Detalles

The study examined the extent to which a highly qualified interpreter remained parallel with or diverged from the original classroom discourse in her interpreting for a 3rd-grade deaf student in science, social studies, and resource room. The interpreter's signed and verbalized expressions were compared to the class participants' expressions for meaning equivalence. Parallel interpreting, occurring 33.2% of the time, closely matched the content of the speaker's message. Divergent interpreting, whereby the interpreter added or dropped elements of meaning, occurred 66.8% of the time. Qualitative analyses of classroom footage as well as interviews with the interpreter and the teachers revealed how, when, and why the interpreter diverged from the message. While the interpreter often made intentional reductions and additions to the discourse to achieve greater student understanding of language and course content, there was little awareness of these changes among individualized educational program team members.