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Communication 289

Cochlear Implants Misconstrued In The Economist

On July 20th 2013, The Economist published a very damaging article about cochlear implants, which give families with born-deaf children valuable opportunities, such as using two spoken languages in the family home. Read: Listen Up: Technology That Lets Deaf People Hear Team Sound Advice recommends reading the below response from the founder of the Cochlear

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12 years ago 2 Comments Hearingaccess, auditory, choice, cochlear, cochlear implant, communication, country, deaf education, dual, family, future, hearing, implant, implants, informed, Ireland, language, listening, literacy, mainstream, options, parent, parents, policy, preschool, read, schools, skills, social, speech, spoken, support, teaching, verbal

Parent Query: Behaviour Guidance For Children

Several parents recently asked about behaviour guidance for children who’re deaf or hard-of-hearing, so these insights and resources may help. On the behaviour front, young children who’re deaf or hard-of-hearing can be harder to guide as they don’t always hear a particular tone of voice or verbal warning that another child might detect and respond

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12 years ago Hearingaggression, attention, baby, behave, child, communication, deaf, deaf education, education, group, hitting, kicking, model, peer, peers, seek, seeking, social, toddler

Early Interaction With Babies For Communication

Early interaction with babies and infants from the age of 4 weeks by family, lays their communication foundations, according to a new book, “Small Talk” by UK-based speech teacher Nicola Lathey and journalist Tracey Blake. Read: Early Teaching Helps Babies To Talk Parents of children with newly-found hearing issues can now read the basics about

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12 years ago 1 Comment Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaudio, auditory, book, books, chatter, communication, concept, describe, family, grammar, interaction, learning, literacy, parent, parents, preschool, read, reading, social, speech, structure, support, verbal, visual, vocabulary, words

Learned Helplessness: When Less Support Is More

School supports and resource-teaching allocations raise the question of how much support a child actually needs in a classroom, or in a school. Has anyone asked if certain children need help, and if so – when exactly, just how much help, and at what stage of schooling? The Sound Advice team knows of SNA requests for

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12 years ago Education, Hearing, Language Developmentabled, assist, assistance, assistant, child, children, cochlear, communication, deaf, deafness, disability, disabled, education, family, hearing, helper, helpless, helplessness, incapacitation, included, inclusion, inclusive, learn, learned, learning, literacy, mainstream, parent, parents, preschool, school, schools, SNA, speech, support, teach, teacher, teachers, teaching, technology, visual

Early Implants Best For Baby’s Language Progress

In the US, two to three children in every 1000 births is born profoundly deaf, 90% of these babies into hearing families. The average age for a baby to receive a cochlear implant is falling, with research showing babies of 6 to 9 months to benefit more from the technology, than even at 12 months,

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12 years ago 1 Comment Education, Hearing, Language Developmentbrain, caregiver, child, children, cochlear, communication, creche, deaf, deafness, development, early, education, family, gap, group, hearing, home, inclusion, inclusive, infant, intervention, language, listening, mainstream, parent, parents, plasticity, preschool, school, schools, speaking, speech, spoken, teach, teacher, teachers, teaching, verbal, vocabulary, window, years

Florida Legislates For The Auditory-Verbal Option

Parents of newly-identified children who’re profoundly deaf, have a lot going on. Not least, they must make hearing and communication choices on behalf of the children, and decide how the family is going to communicate in general. Recently, the US state of Florida passed legislation for parents to be told of all the possible communication options

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12 years ago 1 Comment Education, Hearing, Language Developmentapproach, auditory, auditory-verbal, book, books, chat, chatterbox, child, children, choice, cochlear, communication, concept, conversation, directed, documented, exchange, exchanges, family, focused, formal, hearing, inclusion, inclusive, informed, interaction, Ireland, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, online, option, parent, parents, peer, preschool, proof, read, reading, research, school, schools, session, skills, social, speak, speaking, specialised, speech, talk, talking, teach, teacher, teachers, teaching, therapist, therapy, training, verbal, visual, words, writing, written

Talking With Teens Who Have Hearing Issues

Deafness is called the ‘invisible disability’, and teens can be very reluctant to disclose what they see as a social vulnerability. A librarian who has hearing issues herself, shares some communication tips – which can be used almost anywhere a pen, paper, the internet or a mobile phone is available. Read: Serving teens with hearing

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12 years ago Education, Hearingaccess, accessibility, accessible, app, book, books, child, children, clear, clearly, cochlear, communication, computer, digital, hear, inclusive, laptop, lip-read, lip-reading, lipread, lipreader, listen, listening, literacy, mainstream, mobile, paper, PC, pen, phone, read, reading, software, speak, speaking, speech, support, talk, talking, training, verbal, visual, words

A Critique On Deaf Identity In "Far From The Tree"

The award-winning book by Andrew Solomon, “Far From The Tree: Parents, Children And The Search For Identity” (November 2012), gives a very one-sided view of deafness, says US-based journalist Lisa A. Goldstein – who is deaf and verbal, with cochlear implants. Read Goldstein’s Critical Review: Far From The Truth Goldstein reminds us of the “anonymous

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12 years ago Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaccess, accessibility, book, children, cochlear, communication, deaf, deafness, education, family, hearing, identity, inclusion, inclusive, Ireland, language, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, media, misrepresentation, parent, parents, perception, preschool, read, reading, review, school, social, society, speech, teachers, technology, training, verbal, words

Introduction To Auditory Verbal Therapy (Belfast)

Auditory-Verbal Therapy (AVT) is a parent-centred approach to enabling children with deafness to learn to talk by listening with digital hearing-devices from infancy, where possible. The UK had 14 certified AVT therapists (in 2013), and on April 27th (2013) a free 2-hour information session on AVT was held in Belfast for parents of deaf children

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12 years ago Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaccessible, audition, auditory, auditory-verbal, child, children, CI, cochlear, communication, concept, deafness, device, devices, education, family, hearing, home, implant, inclusion, inclusive, language, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, oral, parent, parents, preschool, read, school, schools, social, sound, speak, speech, spoken, support, teach, teacher, teachers, teaching, therapist, therapy, training, verbal, visual, words, work

Parents’ Essential Role In Language Development

Parents have a stronger role than researchers thought, in developing verbal language in children with hearing issues. A new study from the University of Miami shows “maternal sensitivity [has] strong and consistent effects on oral language learning”, a fact that hospital cochlear implant teams need to note. Read: Mom’s sensitivity helps language learning in deaf

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12 years ago 1 Comment Education, Hearing, Language Developmentaccess, book, books, child, children, cochlear, communication, deaf, deafness, device, devices, engage, family, hard of hearing, interact, interaction, Ireland, language, learn, learning, literacy, mainstream, parent, parents, preschool, read, reading, screen, smartphone, social, speech, spoken, support, teach, teaching, verbal, visual, words
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