About The Book

Literacy and Deafness: Listening and Spoken Language, Second Edition

Literacy and Deafness: Listening and Spoken Language, now in its second edition, is intended for speech-language pathologists, teachers, and parents of children with hearing loss. Research shows that literacy levels are generally higher in individuals with hearing loss who have learned the spoken language they are reading. At a time when advancements in technology continue to provide increasingly improved access to sound and spoken language, this book pulls together the dominant research from the “hearing world” and applies it to the world of the deaf and hard of hearing. The author argues that helping a child learn to listen and speak is the best way to ensure he or she will learn to read and write.

For the second edition, the author has revised and updated the content, expanded several chapters, and added four new chapters:

  • Reading Aloud with Children
  • Creating and Using Language Experience Books
  • Music Learning and Spoken Language Development
  • Parenting a Child with Hearing Loss
  • Where Are They Now? Listening and Spoken Language Outcomes

Literacy and Deafness: Listening and Spoken Language, Second Edition, is a valuable tool for those who wish to help individuals with hearing loss develop the highest possible levels of literacy.

About The Author

Literacy and Deafness: Listening and Spoken Language, Second Edition

Lyn Robertson teaches in the Department of Education of Denison University, a liberal arts college in Granville, Ohio. She began her career teaching seventh grade English where she discovered students achieving at low levels in reading and writing. This led her to extensive study of literacy, particularly within linguistic, cognitive, and social frameworks. Robertson has taught reading and about reading to people from preschool to adulthood. The mother of a daughter with severe-to-profound hearing loss, she has authored one book, Literacy Learning for Children Who Are Deaf or Hard of Hearing, and articles about listening and reading. She also teaches in the A.G. Bell First Years program and serves on the Alexander Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing Academy for Listening and Spoken Language.

Table Of Contents

Literacy and Deafness: Listening and Spoken Language, Second Edition

Preface
Contributors

Chapter 1. A History of Reading Achievement in People with Hearing Loss

  • Introduction
  • A Review of Selected Studies
  • Higher Academic Achievement and Spoken Language
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 2. Literacy Theories

  • Introduction
  • Theorizing About Reading
  • Definitions of Reading
  • Word Identification
  • Comprehension
  • An Interactive Theory
  • Many Disciplines Study Reading
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 3. Technology and Listening, by Carol Flexer, Ph.D., LSLS CERT. AVT

  • Introduction
  • Neurologic Basis of Listening and Literacy
  • Computer Analogy for Understanding Amplification Technology
  • Overview of Amplification Technologies—A New Context
  • Cochlear Implants
  • Auditory Feedback Loop
  • Distance Hearing/Incidental Learning
  • New Context for the Word “Deaf”
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 4. Spoken Language

  • Introduction
  • Learning the Sounds of a Spoken Language
  • Beyond the Sounds of Language
  • What About Bridging from American Sign Language?
  • Learning Spoken Language
  • Two Extended Studies of Children’s Language Learning and Later Academic Achievement
  • “Advantaged” and “Disadvantaged” Parents
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 5. Hearing, Listening, and Literacy

  • Introduction
  • Phonological Awareness
  • Phonological Processing Capabilities
  • The Auditory-Verbal Approach
  • Principles of Listening and Spoken Language Specialist Auditory-Verbal Therapy (LSLS Cert. AVT)
  • Principles of Listening and Spoken Language Specialist Auditory-Verbal Education (LSLS Cert. AVEd)
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 6. Issues in Child Development, by Gina Dow, Ph.D.

  • Introduction
  • Sensitivity in the Caregiving Relationship
  • Part I: Early Identification
    • Attunement and Early Identification of Hearing Loss
    • Early Identification and Intervention—How Early Is Early Enough?
    • Early Identification in the United States
    • From Screening to Identification to Intervention
    • Concluding Remarks and Recommendations
  • Part II: Typical Development—Birth to Age Five
    • Cognitive Development and Play
    • Motor Development
    • Development of Self-Help Skills
  • Developmental Context
    • The Family Context as the Child’s Immediate Environment
    • The Social and Economic Context
    • The Cultural Context
    • When Hearing Impairment Co-Occurs with Other Conditions
    • Useful Links on Developmental Milestones, Developmental Disabilities, and Hearing Impairment
  • References

Chapter 7. Learning to Read

  • Introduction
  • Constructivism in Action
  • Shared Book Reading
  • Establishing a Rich Literacy Environment
  • Reading Comprehension and the Child
  • Practical Ideas for Helping Children Learn to Read
  • Conclusion

Chapter 8. Reading Aloud With Children

  • Introduction
  • When Should Reading Aloud Begin?
  • How—and Why—Should Reading Aloud Begin?
  • Reading Aloud is an Indirect Way of Teaching a Child How to Read
  • Reading Aloud is also a Direct Way of Teaching a Child How to Read
  • How to Read Aloud with a Child with Hearing Loss
  • An Extraordinary Example of Reading Aloud: The 1000-Day Reading Streak
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 9. Learning to Write

  • Introduction
  • Writing and the Auditory-Verbal Approach
  • A Word About Development
  • Practical Ideas for Helping Children Learn to Write
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 10. Creating and Using Language Experience Books

  • Introduction
  • Start and End with Listening
  • A Spiral Progression through Using Language Experience Books
  • Deciding on the Content for an LEB Entry
  • An Example
  • Conversations about Making and Using Language Experience Books
  • General Comments from Teachers and Therapists about Using Language
  • Experience Books
  • Similarities and Differences Among Children With and Without Hearing Loss
  • Using Background Knowledge
  • Experiences of Teachers Who Have Been Trying Language Experience Books
  • A Mother’s Experience with Language Experience Books
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 11. Proceeding Through School

  • Introduction
  • The “Fourth-Grade Slump”
  • Readers Who Are Deaf or Hard of Hearing and the Fourth Grade Level
  • Phonological Awareness, Vocabulary, and Reading Achievement
  • Vocabulary Growth
  • Comprehension Growth
  • Academically Successful Young Adults with Hearing Loss
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 12. Parents, Therapists, and Teachers Working Together

  • Introduction
  • Emotional Connectedness and a Team Approach
  • IDEA and IEPs
  • Using Mediation and Mediation Skills
  • Practical Ways for the Team to Communicate
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 13. English Language Learners and Bilingualism

  • Introduction
  • Can Children with Hearing Loss Learn More Than One Spoken Language?
  • Learning to Read in the First Language First
  • Multilingual Mastery is Possible
  • Hearing or Deaf, Language Learning Is Possible
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 14. Music Learning and Spoken Language Development

  • Introduction
  • Issues Involved in Learning about Music
  • Music Learning in Children with Hearing Loss
  • Music Learning in Children with Typical Hearing and its
  • Association with Literacy
  • Music Lessons for Children with Hearing Loss who are Learning to Listen
  • The Work of Two Talented Therapists
  • The Suzuki Approach and Literacy
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 15. Assessment Issues and Approaches

  • Introduction
  • Norm-Referenced Standardized Tests
  • Criterion-Referenced Tests
  • The Relative Value of Norm-Referenced and Criterion-Referenced Tests
  • Practical Reading Assessments for Teachers to Use
  • Conclusion
  • Refernces

Chapter 16. Promising Literacy Programs

  • Introduction
  • Four General Suggestions
  • Before, During, and After Reading
  • Basic Elements of a Lesson Plan
  • Specific Steps for Meeting Literacy Goals
  • Reading and Writing as Thinking: The Basis of Good Programs in Reading
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 17. Educational Settings for Children with Hearing Loss

  • Introduction
  • The Optimum Placement
  • What if the Optimum Is Not Possible?
  • Schooling Is Not the Only Source of Education
  • A Letter to a Mainstream Classroom Teacher
  • Conclusion

Chapter 18. Parenting a Child with Hearing Loss

  • Introduction
  • Some Precepts to Consider
  • Conclusion
  • References

Chapter 19. Where Are They Now? Listening and Spoken Language Outcomes

  • Introduction
  • The Questions
  • The Respondents
  • Reference

Chapter 20. Thoughts From Two Founders of the Auditory-Verbal Approach

  • Introduction
  • Foreword, 1990, by Daniel Ling, Ph.D.
  • An Auditory-Verbal Retrospective: A Personal Account of Individual Effort and International Organization, 1989, by Helen *:Hulick Beebe, CCC/SP
  • References

Appendix A. Knowledge Needed by Listening and Spoken Language Specialists
Appendix B. Listening and Spoken Language Specialist (LSLS) Domains Addressed in This Book
Appendix C. Description, Approaches, and Practice of Listening and Spoken Language Specialists

Index

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