Chapter
4
Listening as a Gateway to Learning
Karen L.
Anderson, Ph. D.
Dr.
Anderson was an educational audiologist
for 15 years, consulting with parents
and teachers about the needs of children
with hearing loss, managing amplification
device wear, and providing aural habilitation
services to children. She is the author
or co-author of the Screening Instrument
For Targeting Educational Risk (SIFTER),
Preschool SIFTER, Secondary SIFTER, Listening
Inventory For Education (LIFE), Children’s
Home Inventory of Listening Difficulty
(CHILD), Early Listening Function (ELF)
test. Her writing and research has focused
on the listening needs of children with
hearing loss in the regular classroom.
She participated on the ANSI 12 Work Group
that developed the 2002 Acoustical Performance
Criteria, Design Requirements, and Guidelines
for Schools and is the 2003 recipient
of the Educational Audiology Association’s
Fred Berg Award. Dr. Anderson currently
serves as the early hearing loss detection
and intervention audiology consultant
and coordinator of early intervention
services for children with hearing loss
in the State of Florida.
Due to
the success of newborn hearing screening
and early identification of hearing loss,
parents now have the opportunity to spend
countless hours arranging the world of
a child with hearing loss so that he or
she can learn language from listening
in everyday situations. During early intervention
services, parents come to understand that
the child’s sensory devices, whether
it be high technology hearing aids or
cochlear implants, are the lifeline that
the child uses to learn language and the
meaning of the many sounds that provide
important information. Parents typically
become aware of the size of their child’s
listening bubble—how close the parent
needs to be for the child to be able to
detect a sound and the distance needed
for the child to really hear the parent’s
speech well enough to understand what
is said (see Figure 4-1).
In the
early years of the child’s life
the parents also develop an awareness
that background noise in the car, grocery
store or fast-food restaurant causes the
child’s listening bubble to be much
smaller and conversation much more challenging.
After all of the many hours of interacting
with the child—talking, teaching,
listening and learning—parents can
be proud of their son’s or daughter’s
hard earned success as a communicator.
This success is a credit to early dedication
to the child’s future and to providing
the child with a rich listening and language
environment.
During
the first few years of life many children
with hearing loss master repeating the
Ling sounds (/oo/, /ah/, /ee/, /s/, /sh/,
/m/) as the parents and children work
together to check the functionality of
the hearing aids or cochlear implants.
The child may have become very dependable,
reporting to the parent when a problem
occurs with a hearing aid or the speech
processor on the implant. This is evidence
that the child can recognize that malfunctioning
technology is a break or weakness in the
lifeline to a world of sound. Although
some children may rely on attending to
visual cues or sign language, most children
who are identified with hearing loss shortly
after birth will develop skills to allow
them to learn and monitor their world
through what they hear with amplification.
Children
identified with hearing loss today can
experience a future that is much brighter
than most children with hearing loss from
previous decades. Early hearing loss detection,
early hearing aid fitting, appropriate
early intervention services and truly
involved parents communicating effectively
and frequently have been found to be the
four keys to preventing language and learning
delays in children with hearing loss.
The result is an increasing number of
children with all degrees of hearing loss
who have normal or near-normal language
skills by the time they start preschool
or kindergarten. After all of the work,
time, care and expense invested during
infancy and “toddlerhood,”
many parents begin to feel confident that
their child with hearing loss has learned
what is needed to communicate, socialize
and be educated side-by-side with other
children of his or her age who do not
have a hearing loss.
Entering
the Educational Environment
Listening is a vital
gateway to learning. The purpose of this
chapter is to discuss factors in the educational
environment that can be barriers to learning
for the child with hearing loss. This
chapter will first describe the challenges
that the child with hearing loss will
face in perceiving speech as clearly as
possible in a school setting. These different
issues interrelate to create a unique
ability to perceive speech and cope with
hearing loss for each child. Although
the mounting challenges can seem overwhelming
and depressing, solutions or a means to
address a child’s intrinsic and
extrinsic challenges to listening will
be described later in the chapter.
Successfully developing
communication skills by age 3 has resulted
in many children with hearing loss spending
their preschool years (3 to 5) in community
preschool settings. In preschool, children
are typically provided a variety of structured
activities. However, there’s one
constant when young children gather together—noise.
In these early learning situations, the
confidence many parents feel in their
child’s communication skills can
begin to falter. This change occurs because
when young children gather together, noise
and its extra challenge to listening enters
the scene.
- Sam’s
teacher says that he plays alone most
of the time but I know he loves it when
Robert comes to our house and they play
together so well!
-
He is always so exhausted when he comes
home from preschool.
- Jasmine’s
teacher said that she wasn’t following
directions. I know that Jasmine knows
the words the teacher is using and she
usually tries so hard to please.
- Jamal
has always been so chatty with us at
home. He and his sister play house together
and build with blocks. In preschool
his teacher said he hardly says a word
and just watches the other children
as they play.
- He
pushed a child down! We’ve always
taught him to share and to ask for toys
and today his teacher said Travis just
pushed another little boy down and pulled
a toy out of his hands!
- The
teacher says that Maria often acts as
though she is in her own little world.
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