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Georgia State University Series

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Title: Georgia State University Series


1
Georgia State University Series
  • The Impact of a Hearing Loss on Development

2
Affected Areas
  • Language Learning
  • Education
  • Social-Emotional Development
  • Cognition
  • Communication

3
Language Learning
  • Comprehension and production are
    separate issues
  • The communication needs of the child provide the
    semantic and pragmatic base for instruction in
    grammar.
  • Normal language development forms the scope
    and sequence of instruction in the
    grammatical aspects of language.

4
Language Learning (Continued)
  • Teachers need to help students generalize
    language skills to novel situations.
  • To impart language in its richness and
    usefulness, there must be two-way communication.
  • The child must experience the meaning of language
    in many ways.
  • Input must be comprehensible.

5
Comparing Receptive and Expressive Language of
Children Both With and Without Hearing Loss.
  • Children whose hearing loss was identified by 6
    months of
  • age had significantly better scores than those
  • identified after 6 months of age.
  • In those with normal cognitive abilities, this
    statistical
  • difference was independent of age, gender,
    ethnicity,
  • communication mode, degree of hearing loss,
    socioeconomic
  • group, or the presence or absence of other
    disabilities.

Univ. of Colorado Study by Yoshinaga-Itano
6
Education
  • THE DEAF CHILDS FIRST CLASSROOM IS THE HOME

7
What Deaf Children Learn
  • Attention
  • Responsiveness
  • Consistency
  • Predictability
  • Attachment

8
 Infant Development in All Areas
  • 1 month- Social/Emotional Development
  • 2 months- Motor Development
  • 5 months- Cognitive Development
  • 10-12 mo.- Play Development
  • 10-12 mo.- Pre-literacy Development

9
  • Language and intelligence are seen as intimately
    intertwined, such that language development
    drives intellectual development as much
    intellectual development drives language
    development.

Akamatsu, C. Tane and Musselman, Carol. (1990).
10
Long Term Effect of Education on Hearing Loss
  •  With Early Intervention
  •      at age 2 child has age- appropriate levels
    in language, motor, and cognitive skills

11
Without Early Intervention
  • Most deaf children begin school with a limited
    language and knowledge base.
  • Age 2 is year of Language Explosion-same time
    typical deaf child is identified
  •  

12
Social-emotional Development
  • Deaf children could be considered to be
    impulsive, egocentric, or socially immature.
    This is due to experiencing limited communication
    in their family environment

13
  • Deafness in itself
  • does not lead to
  • poor social
  • competence poor
  • and limited
  • communication
  • results in poor
  • social competence.

14
  • For deaf children or others who have experienced
    delays in language, the inability to
    spontaneously mediate experience and label
    aspects of emotional states leads to increasingly
    serious gaps in social-emotional development.

15
  • As a group, deaf children show significant
    deficits when compared with hearing children in
    such areas as impulse control, self-esteem, the
    ability to interpret facial expressions, and
    moral development.

16
Imagine how difficult it would be to have a
strong, positive self-concept if
17
  • (1) one often did not understand what was
    happening and why,

(2) one had a limited vocabulary to express
internal feelings, and
(3) one always felt dependent upon others to
solve ones own problems!
18
Cognition
  • Research suggests that deaf children are more
    likely to have greater difficulties when language
    is required but not necessarily when tasks are
    nonverbal.
  • In general, deaf children show delays in the
    development of emotional understanding.

19
Communication
  • For communication to be effective, it must be
    directed specifically to deaf children, who must
    pay close visual attention. Deafness itself
    limits some avenues of incidental learning.
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