Wednesday, August 26, 2015
A Baker's Dozen -- ideas for classroom
http://hearinghealthmatters.org/hearingandkids/2015/a-bakers-dozen-school-recommendations-for-families-with-students-who-are-deaf-or-hard-of-hearing/
Sunday, August 23, 2015
falling into traps while trying to enhance communicaiton
http://auditoryverbaltherapy.net/2015/06/09/i-do-not-run-a-pet-shop-dogs-parrots-and-auditory-verbal-therapy/
Saturday, August 22, 2015
Who was Dr. Ling?
http://www.listeningandspokenlanguage.org/uploadedFiles/Connect/Meetings/2014_Convention/Application%20of%20Ling%E2%80%99s%20Strategies%20A%20Global%20Perspective.pdf
Wednesday, August 12, 2015
Why AVTs do not recommend sign language?
If you work with kids who are deaf, everyone thinks you sign. I tell people I teach children to listen and talk and I do NOT use sign language and they still think I do? It's crazy how ingrained the notion of deafness needing sign is. With today's technology most children who are deaf are able to use hearing technology to learn to listen well and speak really well.
Some of my colleagues have already blogged about this:
Some of my colleagues have already blogged about this:
Re: the question of when we might recommend sign language --- My friend has a blog ---
and another colleague has this answer to why NOT baby sign:
Sunday, August 9, 2015
AGBell Symposium 2015: ABCs of AVT
http://www.listeningandspokenlanguage.org/uploadedFiles/Connect/Meetings/2015_AG_Bell_Listening_and_Spoken_Language_Symposium/Presentation%20Back%20to%20Basics%20ABCs%20of%20AVT.pdf
AVT and other methods for teaching people who are deaf
http://www.auditory-verbal.org/tag/auditory-verbal/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deaf_education
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deaf_education
What is AVT? Parent Book
Please read Joanna Stith, Ph.D. CCC-SLP, Cert. AVT's nice resource?
http://www.rchsd.org/documents/2014/04/what-is-auditory-verbal-therapy-cochlear-implant.doc
http://www.rchsd.org/documents/2014/04/what-is-auditory-verbal-therapy-cochlear-implant.doc
Simser: AVT Techniques & Hierarchies
AUDITORY-VERBAL TECHNIQUES AND HIERARCHIES
Judith Simser
Consultant in Childhood Hearing Impairment
simser@magma.ca
In Auditory-Verbal practice there is an expectation that
young children with hearing loss can use technologically assisted hearing to
learn to listen, to process verbal language and to speak. The goal is that
children with hearing loss can grow up in regular learning and living
environments that enable them to become independent, participating, and
contributing citizens in mainstream society. The A-V philosophy supports the
basic human right that children with all degrees of hearing loss deserve an
opportunity to develop the ability to listen and to use verbal communication in
their daily lives. Adapted from Auditory-Verbal International, (1991)
Goldberg & Flexer and (2001) presented an outcome survey
of children raised in Auditory-Verbal programmes. Ninety-three percent of the
respondents were severely or profoundly deaf.
The questions in the survey revealed the following:
1) Do you consider yourself part of the hearing world, the
deaf world, or both?
--- 76% consider themselves part of the hearing world
--- 21% consider themselves part of both the hearing and the
deaf world
--- less than 1% was part of the deaf world
2) Nearly 90% had been fully mainstreamed in regular schools
3) 72% use the telephone
4) 94% went on to post-secondary education
Individualized auditory-verbal sessions
One of the principles of Auditory-Verbal Practice states
that diagnostic therapy is individualized with parent participation1. By
individualizing therapy, therapists are able to adjust the program to account
for differences in a child's and a parent’s personality, their learning styles,
their interests, the degree of handicap and current functioning level of the
child. In therapy sessions, a favorable learning environment is created for
the parent and child with good acoustics, few distractions from others and a
child in the presence of positive role models. Toys in a therapy program should
replicate real life activities in a home environment. When the parent and child
return to their home and community, they have ample opportunity in a natural
setting to practice the skills and activities that they learned in therapy
sessions. It is beneficial for the therapist to make an occasional home visit
so that each family's home environment and living style is considered in
therapy planning. Activities that replicate a specific family's routine
activities in the home and community will foster the use of incidental language
throughout their day.
Children learn best by a parent/caregiver integrating
targets that are unrecognised by the child, into to the child's daily life.
Examples include:
• String up a clothesline between two chairs. Wash and hang
out the doll's clothes.
• Buy fruit at a market. Return to the therapy session. Cut
up the fruit and offer it to other children.
In the clinics in Taiwan there are situational therapy
rooms: a bedroom, a living room and a kitchen to replicate those settings in
the home. Parents are often nervous about children being in the kitchen.
Parents learn that the kitchen has a wealth of listening, vocabulary and
language learning opportunities when engaged in activities such as: making
cookies, pudding, playdoh, toast with facial parts drawn with butter, cutting
vegetables and sandwiches, making simple picture-drawn recipes. Many of these
activities can be recreated in any therapy room!
Location of sessions
The auditory-verbal approach can be practised everywhere!
Sessions can be held at the park, at the train station, at the local market or
shopping centre or simply during a walk in the neighbourhood.
Why parents participate
It is through participation in therapy sessions that parents
practice techniques and integrate targets into daily living. They obtain
educational support, counselling, and guidance to enable them to become
actively involved, thus developing a greater sense of confidence and control.
Parents collaborate with the therapist in adapting play activities to their
child's interests and abilities. They interpret the meaning of their child's
communicative attempts. Parents serve as a communicating partner in responding
to a variety of linguistic features such as answering questions and using
pronouns. Parents help to model communication techniques such as: turn taking
routines, postures to promote thinking and listening, pausing and responding.
By participating, parents gain insight into the forthcoming stages of
development of their child. As parents develop their skills in active and
critical listening, they learn to see the constant interplay of targets. Any
one event can incorporate targets in listening, speech, language, cognition and
communication. Targets and specific examples are given to parents/caregivers
and classroom teachers to co-ordinate efforts and to build upon listening
basics. When parents learn how to integrate auditory-verbal techniques into
everyday meaningful activities and experiences, their children have the best
opportunity to develop a good listening and language outcome. Parents can
become the professionals’ greatest allies. To ignore their contribution is to
compromise a child’s future.
Therapists may discourage a parent's participation because
often it is easier for a therapist, (as an authority figure) to maintain
control of a child without a parent in the room. However, it is not the number
of teacher contact hours that develops a child’s language! Or is it the number
of hours sitting at a table doing "therapy". It is not the quantity
or quality of toys! A foundation of language is developed through natural
interactions about topics that are meaningful and interesting to a child. A
parent's work is a child's play!
Most early language learners do not have sufficient language
to access the set curriculum developed by boards of education. How can a child
follow academic subjects when a child doesn’t have the language to request
needs, explain feelings and observations, to communicate and to learn? An
individualised program, suited to the parent and child’s needs, is created
through ongoing assessment and teaching; as well as the teamwork of parents and
therapist.
Parents are instructed in techniques to be the primary
language facilitator for their child. Parent's active participation in therapy
sessions can be reinforced by the therapist in the following ways:
• stating the goal to the parent before beginning an
activity.
• modelling strategies clearly.
• beginning the activity then turning it over to the parent.
• providing encouraging feedback to parents.
• discussing how the parent would implement goals in other
environments.
Parent progress
There are a variety of ways to assess and guide parents in
their interactions with their child. Most methods involve interactional
approaches such as in "Bromwich's Parent Behaviour Progression
Form".2 Parent behaviours during different stages of their infant or
child’s development are recorded as observed or reported during conversations.
In Cole's book, she provides a checklist, "Caregivers:
Communication-Promoting Behaviours." This lists desired observations
during interactions between parent and child.3 These forms can provide a
framework for further discussion between a therapist and parent.
Observe parent-child interaction
Frequently therapists will benefit from asking parents to
bring some materials and activities from home. Parents may then play with their
child while the therapist observes. Some parents may prefer that the therapist
watch through a one-way mirror if available or sessions may be videotaped for
discussion later. To build on the parents’ strengths, it is important that the
therapist emphasises the effective content and techniques that the parents use.
Then by modelling, the therapist can help the parents grow in skills and
confidence. Many an anxious parent may succumb to the trap of continually
testing their child. This often leads to parent-child conflict. It is suggested
to leave the assessment to the therapist so parents can more readily follow
their child's lead and develop a mutual trust in play.
COMPONENTS OF AUDITORY-VERBAL THERAPY
With the beginning listener emphasis should be on providing
the individual with plenty of listening opportunities with few demands for
speech production. With severe to profound congenital deafness, very young
children (from one to two years) are best suited to receiving a cochlear
implant, as they are quick to learn through hearing. There is good plasticity
of the brain during these critical language learning years. It is common for
toddlers and children to develop natural gestures during the first two years of
life. Most children with hearing loss will not have developed another mode of
communication if implanted early. Most of them live at home with their
parents/caregivers in a setting conducive to developing natural language and
thus these children are in an ideal position to benefit from Auditory-Verbal
techniques. For the older, very visual learner, parents will need to help their
child transition gradually from a visual to an auditory mode. By following the
beginning stages in developing of listening skills in contrived and natural
settings and by initially preceding and then confirming auditory input with
situational cues, a child can begin to develop comprehension through listening.
By building upon weekly listening, speech and language targets and by expanding
on language learned through hearing, a child’s confidence in listening will
increase.
Individualised diagnostic sessions are routinely held once
weekly for one to one and a half hours. The following outline describes some
essential components of a therapy session and factors to be considered in
planning:
SEGMENTS OF SESSIONS FACTORS TO CONSIDER
All components are to be integrated into daily natural,
useful and meaningful routines & play activities.
Hearing aid or CI function check Child and parent
participation
Development of listening skills Aims and materials
Speech perception and production Parent-child-therapist
interaction
Language development Integration of segments
Cognitive development Unplanned learning and flexibility
Communication competence Pace and motivation
Parent discussion and setting targets Listening to the child
and parent
AUDITORY-VERBAL TECHNIQUES
The following are some of the techniques used in
Auditory-Verbal education to enhance a child’s listening, speech and language
skills.
1. THE HAND CUE
The HAND CUE is one of the most useful yet frequently
misunderstood techniques used in auditory-verbal practice. Some individuals
incorrectly equate the hand cue as the main feature of Auditory-Verbal
education. It is only one of many A-V techniques used to develop a child’s
listening and spoken language. Questions arise: “What is the hand cue and why
do we use it?” “Do we block the acoustic signal?” “Is it used in school?”
“WHAT IS A HAND CUE?”
It is a cue to listen! It is a cue to alert children to the
fact that someone is talking to them and that they need to attend to listen.
The speaker emphasises listening by shielding his or her mouth from the child’s
view. Care must be used not to cup the hand over the mouth, preventing acoustic
information from fully reaching the child. A flat, slanted hand held slightly
above the mouth encourages a child to listen rather than seek visual cues. When
the caregiver or therapist places their hand in front of a child’s mouth, it is
a child’s prompt to respond, either through imitation or spontaneous speech.
A hand cue is especially useful when talking to a visually
oriented child with hearing loss who is searching for visual cues.
“WHY IS A HAND CUE USED AND WHEN?”
A hand cue is unnecessary with young infants and babies or
for children who are keen and effective listeners, as they tend not to search
for visual cues and usually focus on toys and activities around them. However
in most Auditory-Verbal programmes many children with hearing loss entering the
clinics have not had the opportunity to learn to listen. This is usually due to
late and/or inappropriate amplification with hearing aids or teaching methods
that have not emphasised auditory learning. Naturally, these children learn to
substitute their sense of vision for their lack of listening development.
Unless their sense of hearing is emphasised, these children continue to
function as deaf. American Doreen Pollack, a pioneer in the auditory-verbal
approach, made the following observations:
“I learned that one could not simply hang a hearing aid on
children and expect them to develop hearing perceptions normally. Instead the
children continued to act as if they were deaf. Sound was meaningless. When the
children were encouraged to use lip-reading or signing, they continued to be
visual learners and ignored sound.
I came to realise that one did not have to teach deaf
children to look but instead one had to teach them to listen. A hearing aid
gave more hearing, but listening had to be learned. I had to make sound an
important and meaningful part of everything the children were experiencing.”
If a child has a profound hearing impairment and has
insufficient aided hearing to access the speech range to develop spoken
language through hearing, his/her parents may chose cochlear implantation for
their child. Once the cochlear implant is programmed, this child will be a
beginning auditory learner and with effective auditory-verbal techniques will
gradually transition from using only vision to developing his/her newfound
hearing potential by learning to listen.
“WHO USES THE HAND CUE?”
Audiologists, speech language pathologists, or educators of
the deaf, any professional who has developed the techniques of the
Auditory-Verbal approach, may introduce the hand cue to the child’s primary
caregivers when deemed beneficial. It should not be used by school classroom
teachers and friends but mainly by parents or other key caregivers in a child’s
environment. When acoustics are less favourable then a child with hearing
impairment he/she will need to use visual cues and body language to supplement
hearing, as does a typically hearing individual. Many speech/language
pathologists have found the hand cue useful in highlighting listening in
certain cases of children with normal hearing.
“CAN TECHNIQUES OTHER THAN THE HAND CUE BE USED TO EMPHASIZE
HEARING?”
Yes! The primary caregiver should sit beside the child,
close to the microphone of the better ear with the hearing technology. The
closer they are to the child’s ear the softer the voice to ensure the
opportunity to hear the less salient speech sounds. Vowels are louder than
consonants and often mask a child’s hearing of the softer consonants. This is
often evident in a child’s speech when consonants are deleted or substituted.
No hand cue is necessary with preferential seating unless the child is actively
searching for visual cues.
The therapist or teacher can suggest that the older child
turn away to emphasise listening. This helps the child attend to the listening
task and to concentrate on what is heard.
“WHEN DO YOU STOP USING A HAND CUE?”
When a child has a natural listening interaction, a hand cue
is not necessary. However it is useful to continue using auditory techniques to
gain a higher level of auditory learning such as listening in noise, talking on
the telephone and overhearing conversations. Many an adult with hearing loss
seeks further therapy to practise and enhance their auditory skills. The
greater the skills in listening the greater the ability to monitor one’s voice
and speech quality. This explains why effective auditory-verbal listeners
usually have natural sounding speech.
2. ACOUSTIC HIGHLIGHTING
The earliest form of acoustic highlighting used is called
“Motherese” or “Parentese.” It is speech used by parents/caregivers in talking
with young children to make speech more audible to help them in learning
language. Research by Dr. Patricia Kuhl indicates that parentese is universal
and plays a vital role in helping infants analyse speech. The use of early
highlighting is an auditory technique that is extended in communicating with
the beginning hearing aid or cochlear implant user to increase the audibility
of language. As a child learns to listen, the aim is to progress towards a more
normal, less highlighted mode of communication.
Examples of acoustic highlighting are as follows:
MORE AUDIBLE progressing to LESS HIGHLIGHTING
(for a beginning child) (for a child who is listening well)
No background noise Increased background noise
6” from hearing aid or Increased distance from
C.I. hearing aid or C.I.
Simpler language with Complex sentences
shorter phrases
Greater acoustic contrast Less varied acoustic contrast
(vowel variation, rhythm and syllable (minimal pairs,
similar rhythm)
contrast)
Emphasis on key words No emphasis on key words
Emphasis on words not accentuated, No emphasis
(prepositions, articles, verb tenses,
pronouns)
Word position in sentence:
End of sentence Middle Beginning
Closed set Open set
Slightly slower rate Normal rate
Increased pitch variation Normal rhythm
and rhythm
(sing what you say)
Clearer enunciation Less clear and/or unfamiliar
(use of “clear” speech) voice
Increased repetition No repetition
© Judith I. Simser
However, having reached the goal of less highlighting, it
must be remembered that there are many noisy acoustic environments where
acoustic highlighting may continue to be necessary just as it is with those who
have normal hearing.
3. AUDITORY FEEDBACK
When children imitate or use spontaneous speech, they match
their voice production with the speech patterns of others thus monitoring their
own speech production. Besides this direct auditory feedback, children receive
indirect feedback from the listener’s reactions to their vocalisations and
speech, which further reinforces the quality of their production. In auditory
directions, asking children to imitate what they heard, discourages guessing as
it serves to verify what the children heard before attempting the task.
4. PAUSING AND WAITING
Children with hearing impairment may take longer to process
auditory information, so the technique of pausing and waiting with anticipation
encourages a child to listen and follow through with a task rather than waiting
for the speaker to repeat.
When a child has developed some spoken language through
hearing and is not attending well to auditory input he/she may respond to
auditory input with “What?” or may sit there with a blank expression on his/her
face. To emphasise listening, pause and then ask, “What did you hear?” This
technique helps the child how develop clarification skills. You may discover
that they have heard you and will respond appropriately or they will clarify by
telling how much of the input they grasped.
5. NATURAL SEQUENTIAL DEVELOPMENT
In order to ensure success each child needs to progress
through a hierarchy of listening, speech, language, cognitive and communication
skills, much like a typical child. The Auditory-Verbal therapist develops
targets based on a hierarchical model, (from most audible to least audible) and
on normal stages of development in these areas. Input is provided primarily
through audition. Only too often a child and his family experience failure
because targets are too difficult and do not follow a natural sequential order.
In developing speech through hearing, a developmental program is used.
Initially, variations in vowel content and suprasegmentals offer good acoustic
contrast aiding in speech perception. (See Appendix A-Suggestions for
Highlighting Beginning Vocabulary). Speech babble is used to develop speech
perception. As speech perception improves, there is a reciprocal benefit in
speech production, Ling, D. (1987). Just as we repeat syllables in learning new
words or a new language, so do we encourage the use of syllabic babble to
heighten the auditory perception and production of speech sounds. Once a child
produces targeted syllables, these phonemes must be reinforced in spoken
language. Language targets follow a hierarchy of normal development but also of
available acoustic cues.
In developing a listening function, there is a constant
interplay of targets in listening, speech, language, communication and
cognition in all interactions throughout a child’s day, with any variety of
targets incorporated into any one event. Weekly targets are given to
parents/caregivers and classroom teachers to co-ordinate efforts and to build
upon listening basics. When parents integrate Auditory-Verbal techniques and
targets into everyday, meaningful activities and experiences then their
children have the best opportunity to develop good listening and language
outcomes. Only once children have developed language can they then access
school curricula.
LEARNING TO LISTEN
Guidance in creating a listening, learning environment is
pertinent to the beginning stages, regardless of age.
Suggestions include some of the following:
• Enhance the acoustic environment by being close to the
microphone of a child’s cochlear implant or the hearing aid of the better ear.
Encourage listening by sitting beside a child, (not across), and focusing on
objects in front of parent and child.
• Be aware of and minimise background noises especially the
noise of an air conditioner, television, fridge or radio.
• This student is a BEGINNER. Assist a child by making
speech more audible using parentese; that is, spoken language that is rich in
suprasegmental qualities, repetitive in nature, initially focusing on low and
mid-frequency vowel content, and in the context of short, meaningful
two-to-three-word phrases.
• Throughout the day cue a child to “listen” while pointing
to your ear to alert a child to attend to auditory input and meaningful
environmental sounds. Observe a child’s listening and responding behaviours
such as cessation of movement, eye contact to an object or person, imitation of
a sound or a response indicating listening through body posture.
• Follow a child’s interest level in age and stage
appropriate activities and experiences with specific targets integrated.
• Reinforce the expectation that with Auditory-Verbal
techniques a child will learn to listen
THE ONGOING ASSESSMENT FORM
The following form presents hierarchies in the areas of
audition, language, speech, cognition and communication although it is by no
means complete. It serves as a quick evaluation form, as a diagnostic tool to
help in setting ongoing targets and as a means to discuss progress with
parents.
SIMSER AUDITORY-VERBAL ONGOING ASSESSMENT FORM
© Judith I. Simser
Name: DOB: Date started A.V.:
Hearing loss: Hearing aid model or implant:
Key: Beginning ┴ Inconsistent +
Consistent Expressive Use (Cross out check)
AUDITION
Ling 6 Sound Test: detection & identification m__ u__
a__ i__ sh__ s__ silence__
distance (12 cm. 50 cm. 1 m. 2 m.): m___ u___ a___ i___
sh___ s___
words in phrases: 1. vowels + syllables differ ___ 3.
rhyming words ___
2. same consonant, vowels differ ___ 4. final consonants
only differ ___
auditory memory: 1 __ 2 __ 3 __ 4 __ 5 __ items
identification of consonants by: manner ___ songs &
rhymes ___
voicing___ auditory attention to extended
place___ conversations & stories ___
selection by description: closed set - stage 1. sound-word
repeated ___ 2. identify by key words ___
3. include objects with similar characteristics ___ 4. begin
levels 1 & 2 in open set
open set - stage 1. sound-word repeated ___ 2. identify by
key words ___
3. complex description ___ 4. identify by questioning___
taped instructions and stories____ listening in noise ___
group conversations ___
LANGUAGE
dates:
Vocabulary (1st year only): comprehension ___ wds ___ wds
___ wds ___ wds
spontaneous use ___ wds ___ wds ___ wds ___ wds
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
nouns: sound-word ___ subject nouns ___ object nouns ___
parts of objects ___
by description___ plural nouns, irregular ___ regular___
verbs: directives ___ present progressive ___ future ___
past tense ___ conditional ___
pronouns: mine ___ I ___ you ___ he ___/or she ___ they ___
him ___
her ___ them ___ his ___ hers ___ theirs ____ we ___ us___
it ___ our ___ yours ___ myself ___ who/whom ___
prepositions: up ___ down ___ in or on ___ under ___ behind
___ beside ___
in front ___ in/on ___ cont. with concept list ___
adjectives and adverbs: beginning list ___ concept list ___
negatives: no ___ not ___ don't ___ isn't ___ can’t ___
didn’t ___ wasn’t ___
conjunctions: and ___ not the ___ either-or ___ only ___
everything but ___
neither-nor ___ because ___ so ___ if ___ before ___ after
___
articles: a ___ the ___
questions: What's that? ___ What's he doing? ___ What's it
for? ___
What happened? ___ How many? ___ What colour? ___ Where? ___
What's missing? ___ Who is it? ___ Why? ___ When? ___ How?
___
auxiliary questions: do ___ are ___ is ___ can ___ does ___
examples of spoken language (bracket missing parts of
speech) i.e., Daddy(‘s) car no (won’t) go.
date
_________________________________________________________________________
date
_________________________________________________________________________
SPEECH
voice quality (low 1- 5): ___ speech intelligibility (1-5):
in context ___ out of context ___
suprasegmentals: duration: long ___ short ___ varied ___
intensity: loud ___ soft ___ varied ___
frequency: high___ low ___ varied ___
vowels: u___ a___ o___ æ ___ - i ___ ʌ ___ ɑ __ ɛ ___ - ʋ
___ e ___ ɝ ___ ɔ ___ ɪ ___
vowels alternated: u-a ___ a-u ___ - i-a ___ e-i ___
diphthongs: (ow) aʋ ___ (eye) aɪ ___ (aye) eɪ ___ (oy) ɔɪ
___
consonants: level 1 - p ___ b ___ m ___ h ___ w ___
level 2 - t ___ d ___ n ___ f ___ v ___ (sh) ʃ ___ ʒ ___ r
___ (y) ј ___
level 3 - k ___ g ___ l ___ (ng) ŋ ___ s ___ z ___ (th) θ
___ (th) ð ___
unreleased plosives _________________________
affricates: (ch) ʧ ___
(dg) ʤ ___ Adapted from Ling, D. (2002). Speech and the
hearing impaired child:
Theory and Practice. 2nd Edition. Washington, DC:
Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf.
blends: word initial – sequential ____________ coformulated
_____________ complex blends ______
word final – continuant-continuant ___ continuant-stop ___
stop-continuant___ stop-stop ___
COGNITION
sorting: identical objects ___ categories ___ by function,
shape, colour, number, texture, content
go togethers: real objects ___ cards or puzzles___ colours:
red ___ blue ___ green ___ yellow ___
rote counting: 1-10 ___ number concepts: 1-3 ___ 4-6 ___ 7-10
___ 11-20 ___ no. after___ no. before___
no. in-between ___ count by twos, threes ___ addition by one
___ by twos ___ subtraction by one___ create equal sets___ number stories ___
shapes: circle ___ square ___ star ___ triangle ___
rectangle ___
textures: soft ___ rough ___ continue concept list ___
comparisons: same___ different ___ doesn't belong ___ how
alike ___ categorise and give reasons why ___
sequencing: shapes ___ colours ___ patterns ___ 2-4 pt.
story ___ events ___ tell story __ multiple endings__
identity of an object ___ opposites ___ analogies ___
inferences ___ synonyms ___
double meanings ___ simple jokes ___ riddles ___ idioms ___
COMMUNICATION
has appropriate eye contact ___
practises turn taking ___ uses courtesy language: e.g., bye,
I'm sorry, excuse me ___
initiates interactions ___ uses questioning ___
initiates conversational topics ___
repair strategies: asks for repetition ___ uses appropriate
topic transitions ___
verifies partial information ___ shares conversational
control ___
asks for clarification ___ provides clarification ___
maintains topic: 1 turn ___ 2 turns ___ 3 turns ___ extends
conversation ___
NOTES:
© Judith I. Simser
AUDITORY MEMORY DEVELOPMENT
The items underlined indicate examples of the items a child
needs to identify to understand the directions or information.
*Develop ability to follow a one-item memory task:
1. containing repetition of sound-word association in
phrases, e.g.” The ball goes bounce, bounce, bounce.”
2. in single repetition of a sound-word association, e.g.”
Where’s the cat that goes meow?”
3. in single objects representing nouns, verbs, adjectives
and common phrases with varied suprasegmentals and vowel content, e.g. “Pick the
flower” vs. “Wash, wash, wash your hands” vs. “Mmm, that’s good.”
4. in single objects varying in vowel content and syllables,
e.g. “Where’s the spoon?” vs. apple vs. ice cream cone.
5. with word presented at end of sentence, e.g. “Please get
the bananas.”
6. with word presented in middle or at beginning of sentence
to prepare for two item memory, e.g. “Please put the bananas on the table,”
while the speaker is pointing to the table.
Develop the ability to respond to two-item memory phrases:
1. two nouns, e.g. “Get your shoes and your hat.”
2. noun and verb, e.g. “The baby is sleeping.”
3. verb and object, e.g. “Wash the car.”
4. two verbs, e.g. “Jump and sit down.”
5. adjective and noun, e.g. “Go get your blue shirt.”
6. number and noun, e.g. “I want three candies.”
Develop the ability to process a three-item memory task:
1. three nouns, e.g. “Don’t forget your running shoes, your
coat and your books.”
2. two nouns and a verb, e.g. “The boy and the dog are
running.”
3. noun, and two verbs, e.g. “Daddy is washing and then
having supper.”
4. noun, preposition and object, e.g. “Put your umbrella
under your chair.”
5. two nouns and a conjunction, e.g., “You can have either
an apple or a banana.”
6. two adjectives and a noun, e.g., “Make a big, brown
tail.”
7. Pronoun, verb and object, e.g., “She is cutting the
bread.”
Develop auditory memory tasks of four-to-five items:
1. four nouns, e.g. “When we’re shopping, we need bread, ice
cream, fruit, and crackers.”
2. nouns, preposition and object, e.g. “Put your shovel and
your bike behind the house.”
3. noun, conjunction, preposition and object, e.g., “Get
some popcorn or some chips and put them beside the TV.”
4. two noun-verb phrases, e.g., “The boy is swinging and the
girls are sliding.”
5. add a descriptive phrase, e.g., “See the lady wearing the
blue dress in front of the store?”
6. add a time factor, e.g., “After you do your homework for
one hour, you can watch TV.” “Before you wash your hands , you need to clean
your black shoes.”
The above memory tasks can be practised in real life but
also in contrived play by using toys for role-playing. Try to integrate memory
tasks into daily living rather than making them task oriented.
SELECTION BY DESCRIPTION
A child begins to listen to longer information by
identifying known vocabulary by its description in a closed set (where a choice
of objects is visible to the child). Begin after the child has about a two-item
memory.
1. where a known word or object representing a sound-word is
used repeatedly, e.g. “It flies, up, up, up in the sky, it goes ah….ah, you
ride in it.” “What is it?” Use a choice of four objects of different categories
and all known vocabulary. For example, a shoe, a ball, a car and a dog.
2. identify an object by attending to a single repetition of
familiar key words in the description, e.g., “It has four legs, it swims in the
water, it hops and it is green. What is it? All characteristics in the choice
of objects should vary.
3. include some objects that have a few similar
characteristics, e.g., a bird and an airplane both fly; a fish and a frog both
swim in the water.
4. *begin open set descriptions beginning with steps 1 and 2
above.
EXAMPLES OF BEGINNING LANGUAGE TARGETS DEVELOPED
CONCURRENTLY WITH LISTENING, SPEECH, COGNITION & COMMUNICATION
- pronoun development, (“I, you, your, mine”)
- comprehension and use of prepositions (“in” or “on”) vs.
(“under” or “behind”) in games, in cooking and eating activities, in creating
crafts
Once a child develops phrases, record examples of child’s
language and bracket the missing words so that these can be targeted and
reinforced in future play activities and routines. For example, “I walk(ed) (to)
the store (with) Mummy.” “Daddy(’s) car no (won’t) go!”
SPEECH DEVELOPMENT
In developing speech through hearing, a developmental rather
than remedial program is used. Speech babble is used to develop speech
perception. As speech perception improves there is a reciprocal benefit in
speech production, Ling, D. (1997). Just as we repeat syllables in learning new
words or a new language, so do we encourage the use of syllabic babble to
heighten the auditory perception and production of speech sounds. Segments of
therapy will involve practise in identifying early emerging phonemes such as
vowels [a], [u], [o] and [i] and consonants [b], [m], (sh) and whispered [p]
and [h]. Initially do not combine [u] with [m] as these will sound too similar
to the beginning listener. The young child can practise phoneme perception by
playing with objects with the above phonemes as associated sounds, (see
Appendix A) and the older child can listen to identify them by their phonetic
equivalents. When phonemes are identified, encourage production in syllabic
babble and once achieved, phonemes should be transferred into phonology.
Suggestions to develop intelligible speech include the following:
• listen carefully to a child’s speech to analyse speech
errors rather than lip-reading him/her.
• in all speech techniques attempt to elicit a phoneme
through hearing first. If a visual or tactile cue is used, once the child
produces the sound, have him/her say it repeatedly using hearing only for
auditory feedback to occur.
• when phonemes are missing, distorted or substituted,
soften voice, get close to the implant or hearing aids and acoustically
highlight the defective phoneme in syllabic babble. Once well produced in
syllabic babble, transfer to phonology.
• continue to improve the suprasegmental qualities of
speech. To aid in intelligibility emphasise rhythm in word groupings to create
short phrases. For example, “My sister…went to school…on the school bus.”
• as a child progresses, use less acoustic highlighting with
goal of more normal speech reception and production.
APPENDIX A
SUGGESTIONS FOR HIGHLIGHTING BEGINNING VOCABULARY
Vehicles
boat - p-p-p (unvoiced) car - b-r-r-r (truck)
airplane - a-a-a train - oo-oo-oo bus - bu-bu-bu
Animal sounds
cow - moo dog - bow-wow horse - neigh
cat - meow lamb - ba-a-a fish - swish
pig - oink frog - hop-hop-hop chicken - cluck
bird - chirp duck - quack-quack monkey - ee-ee-ee
owl - hhoo lion - rroar-rroar bear - grr-grr
Action Words Adjectives Nouns
push-push it down that’s hot the watch goes tic-toc
mmm- smell the flower it’s all gone hi baby
wake-up it’s dirty I’m Mummy, Daddy
pop-pop the bubbles it’s soft that’s my shoe
sh-h go to sleep it’s broken slide-up, up, up wee-e
sit down it’s wet that’s my eye, nose, mouth
wash-wash your hands it’s sticky look at the fish
have a drink the clown says ha ha ha
blow-blow the feather Santa says ho ho ho
walk-walk-walk Pronouns
bounce-bounce the ball
go-up-up-up (stairs and lift me up) that’s mine
it goes round and round give it to me
cut-cut....cut the banana
brush your hair, teeth
jump, jump, jump
Common Phrases
bye-bye no-no-no, don’t touch stop it
look at that uh-oh it fell down brr that’s cold
it’s too heavy that’s pretty help me
ow, it’s sore m-m-m that’s good I want more
I want a ______ what a mess pick it up
that’s funny wait a minute
© Judith I. Simser
REFERENCES
Auditory-Verbal International. (1991). Guiding principles.
Auricle. Fall Vol.3. Alexandria, VI.
Bromwich, R. (1981). Working with parents and infants.
Baltimore, MA: University Park Press.
Cole, E. (1992). Listening and talking: A guide to promoting
spoken language in young hearing impaired children. Washington, DC: Alexander
Graham Bell Association for the Deaf.
Estabrooks, W., Editor, (2001). 50 FAQ About AVT, Toronto,
Ont.: Learning to Listen Foundation
Estabrooks, W., Editor, (1994). Auditory-verbal therapy for
parents and professionals, Washington, DC: Alexander Graham Bell Association
for the Deaf.
Flexer, C. (1999), Facilitating hearing and listening in
children. (2nd Ed.). San Diego, CA: Singular Publishing Group
Goldberg, D.M &. Flexer, C. (1993) Outcome survey of
auditory-verbal graduates: Study of clinical efficacy. Journal of the American
Academy of Audiology, 4, 189-200.
Ling, D. (2002). Speech and the hearing impaired child:
Theory and Practice. 2nd Edition. Washington, DC: Alexander Graham Bell
Association for the Deaf.
Ling, D. (1989). Foundations of spoken language for
hearing-impaired children. Washington, DC: Alexander Graham Bell Association
for the Deaf.
Ling, Auditory-Verbal Techniques and Hierarchies by Judith Simser
What is AVT?
What is Auditory-Verbal Therapy?
Auditory-Verbal Therapy enables those who are deaf or hard
of hearing to use their hearing to listen, process verbal language, and speak.
Through Auditory-Verbal Parent Guidance Therapy, families make listening and
speaking a natural part of daily life. Since 1980, parents choosing
Auditory-Verbal Therapy for their children come to the Auditory-Verbal
Communication Center (AVCC) for support and direction. Following a logical set
of guiding principles, parents become the primary teachers for their child’s listening
and speaking skills. Listening then becomes an integral part of the child’s
personality.
Newborn Hearing Screening allows infants in the early days
of their lives to begin this process. Auditory-Verbal Therapy is a highly
effective method using technology for developing the maximum use of hearing.
This approach brings meaningful sound to the brain naturally. Clear speech,
natural spoken language and strong literacy skills are results of Auditory-
Verbal Therapy. Auditory-Verbal “graduates” can communicate with anyone, using
spoken language throughout their lives.
Adults who receive a cochlear implant
choose to work with an Auditory-Verbal Therapist to help them gain maximum benefit from their newly implanted device.
AVCC follows Principles of Auditory- Verbal Practice. We use
Auditory-Verbal techniques, but the most important aspect of Auditory-Verbal
Therapy is when parents understand and live the philosophy that people who are
deaf or hard of hearing can learn to listen and speak. The idea is that "listening is a way of life". As the child develops,
AVCC supports the parents as part of the educational team. We collaborate with
audiologists, early intervention programs, cochlear implant centers, and school
systems.
Auditory-Verbal Therapy expects children to be included in
mainstream education starting at preschool.
Parents want to be sure the A-V therapist is a Certified Auditory-Verbal Therapist. Jim and Lea Watson became
certified in the first class of certified Auditory-Verbal Therapists in 1994. Visit www.agbell.org to learn about the certification process from the Alexander Graham Bell Academy for Listening and Spoken Language. Certification assures that the professional has the knowledge, skills, and
abilities required to teach listening and spoken language in the most efficient
way.
Auditory-Verbal Communication Center is a small private practice located in Gloucester, MA USA.
Principles of Auditory-Verbal Practice
Auditory-Verbal Principles
Principles of LSLS Auditory-Verbal Therapy
1. Promote early diagnosis of hearing loss in newborns,
infants, toddlers, and young children, followed by immediate audiologic
management and Auditory-Verbal therapy.
2. Recommend immediate assessment and use of appropriate,
state-of-the-art hearing technology to obtain maximum benefits of auditory
stimulation.
3. Guide and coach parents¹ to help their child use hearing
as the primary sensory modality in developing spoken language without the use
of sign language or emphasis on lipreading.
4. Guide and coach parents¹ to become the primary
facilitators of their child's listening and spoken language development through
active consistent participation in individualized Auditory-Verbal therapy.
5. Guide and coach parents¹ to create environments that
support listening for the acquisition of spoken language throughout the child's
daily activities.
6. Guide and coach parents¹ to help their child integrate
listening and spoken language into all aspects of the child's life.
7. Guide and coach parents¹ to use natural developmental
patterns of audition, speech, language, cognition, and communication.
8. Guide and coach parents¹ to help their child self-monitor
spoken language through listening.
9. Administer ongoing formal and informal diagnostic
assessments to develop individualized Auditory-Verbal treatment plans, to
monitor progress and to evaluate the effectiveness of the plans for the child
and family.
10. Promote education in regular schools with peers who have
typical hearing and with appropriate services from early childhood onwards.
*An Auditory-Verbal Practice requires all 10 principles.
¹The term "parents" also includes grandparents,
relatives, guardians, and any caregivers who interact with the child.
(Adapted from the Principles originally developed by Doreen
Pollack, 1970)
Adopted by the AG Bell Academy for Listening and Spoken
Language®,
July 26, 2007. Posted on the AGBell website.
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