User:Kssilva01/sandbox

Article
History of sign language

Work for Article
Moores, Donald F. "WRITING SIGNED LANGUAGES: WHAT FOR? WHAT FORM? A RESPONSE." American Annals of the Deaf 161.5 (2017): 537-9. ProQuest. Web. 30 May 2022.

A written form of sign language is not only entirely possible, but also real and contains certain rules and expectations for it. An author by the name of Grushkin outlined that a written form of sign language should be made a certain way, however the author of a peer reviewed journal believes that a small group of members of the Deaf community should be the ones to decide on what a written form of sign language should look like and what it should consist of. While many forms of written sign language have been developed, there is still a consensus to be reached as many within the Deaf community do not agree entirely on whether or not there should even be a written form of sign language at all.

Friend's Peer Review of My Addition
I had my friend read my potential contribution and review it:

The added citations are good because they were necessary within the article and the sources do mention exactly what was said within the article already. Also, the potential contribution is good enough, it might require more in the future from other editors, but it does begin the conversation about written sign language that was mentioned in the talk page of the article.