Ch. 9 AR – Flashcard
Unlock all answers in this set
Unlock answersquestion
Prevalence of children with HL
answer
While numbers vary depending on the criteria used, it is commonly reported that there are approximately 50,000 youngsters who are deaf in the U.S. educational system (about 1 in every 1,000 children), and the majority of them receive special services.
question
How are most children identified with early HL
answer
newborn hearing screening programs
question
Habilitation:
answer
children having prelingual hearing loss
question
• AR should be approached differently for various children
answer
Based on: o degree o time of onset o age of the child
question
Deafness categories for children
answer
Congenital: hearing loss present at birth • should be served through early-intervention ASAP • Prelingual: onset of loss prior to the acquisition of spoken language • Postlingual: onset of loss after spoken language has been acquired • served in a variety of settings, depending on technological intervention and geographic area
question
Before entering school what did AR INCLUDE?
answer
• Before entering school, AR included parent-infant and preschool programs
question
Two-way division
answer
0-5: before school years; 5-18+: school years o 0-3 years= infancy and toddlerhood o 3-5 years= preschool years o 5-18 years= kindergarten, grade school, junior high, and high school
question
What other disabilities may be present?
answer
• May have visual impairments, motor disabilities, or intellectual disabilities
question
What technological advances allow for identification of hearing loss soon after birth through?
answer
the use of two tests of hearing, otoacoustic emissions (OAE) and auditory brainstem response (ABR).
question
What are the disadvantages of protocol screenings?
answer
o Current newborn protocols may miss some infants with sensorineural hearing loss, including those with the mildest degrees of loss, onset of hearing loss after the newborn period, or those with auditory neuropathy.
question
By what age should testing be completed
answer
testing should be completed by 3 months of age
question
Almost all school in the US conduct hearing screenings for?
answer
kindergarten and first-graders
question
• Once of age results should include information on both ears giving:
answer
otoscopic findings, degree and configuration of loss, type of loss and cause, speech recognition ability (clarity of hearing), most comfortable level (MCL), threshold of discomfort (TD), hearing aid performance (verification), and audibility measures
question
What intervals should assessment be taken place?
answer
From birth-3 yrs children should be seen for audiologic assessment at 3-month intervals, at 6-month intervals during the preschool year, and once a year after that.
question
Family-centered practice
answer
includes a focus on family-identified needs, efforts to form partnerships with parents to address child needs, and empowerment of families as the primary decision makers for their child
question
Child-centered practice
answer
refers to an intervention that provides direct service for the child, with limited direct involvement of the parent in intervention
question
What is the purpose of EI?
answer
Therefore, the purpose of early intervention is to get input from the family so that the family can assist their infant activities, routines, and events of everyday life. <-------------Functional
question
Five major principles of family-centered practice include:
answer
1. To support care providers in developing competence and confidence in helping the infant to learn. 2. Family-identified needs should drive the intervention agenda; the professional should adapt to the values culture, and goals. 3. Family members are recognized as the constant in the child's life and the expert. 4. Families are equal team members. 5. Professionals respect the decision-making authority of the family.
question
Family centered practice should focus on the following key ingredients:
answer
Understanding the family routines and important events • Keeping the intervention focused around these • Directing intervention at the capacities of parents to interact appropriately with the child during these activities • Understanding next steps to development • Having skills in teaching parents effective scaffolding techniques.
question
Parents are encouraged to be
answer
consistent, strategic, adaptive, and informed.
question
there is an art and a science to early intervention.
answer
Art-human side • Science- special knowledge of deafness, infancy, and families that the parent-infant educator brings to the task.
question
Tools of trade to be a skilled provider
answer
• Information resource • Coach/partner • Joint discover • News commentator- • Partner in play • Joint reflector and planner-
question
Information resource-
answer
to provide information in objective ways, so that the families become independent advocates and learners.
question
Coach/partner-
answer
a mindset that shifts the focus from the expert-given toward the "learner-focused".
question
Joint discover-
answer
this prepares the families to try techniques with the child and evaluate how they work.
question
New commentator
answer
-Decisions based on ongoing evaluation of what works. Provides descriptive, objective, specific feedback. Ex.-I notice every time she vocalizes, you talk back. o Points out what the family is doing well. o Confidence building.
question
Partner in play
answer
clinician demonstrates play and then sees if the parent can "try the new skill".
question
Joint reflector & planner
answer
at the end of each session, the parent and clinician work together tp list key observations and successes from the time together.
question
interdisciplinary teamwork-
answer
team members collaborate and are interdependent, rather than working independently.
question
What Does The Audiologic Rehabilitation Specialist Provide?
answer
• Fitting and adjustment to full time use of amplification, cochlear implants, and other devices • Auditory learning( use of residual hearing) • Techniques for optimizing communicative development (whether the family is using auditory, auditory-visual, or visually based approaches. *****Once the child reaches preschool age, these service shift to the center-based models***** •
question
center-based models*****
answer
Regular Preschool setting with assistance • Self-contained programs also are available
question
What method of determining a child's usable hearing with amplification.
answer
Desired Sensation Level-a computer based method
question
What type of HA is typically used from infancy to school years
answer
BTE
question
• The role of the AR clinician is to
answer
ensure that the child's device is functioning properly and worn consistently.
question
• Auditory learning activities for infants should focus on
answer
observing and promoting natural listening opportunities throughout natural daily routines.
question
• Cole and Flexer (2011) describe a developmental approach to auditory linguistic learning. The process they outline involves four phase of infant auditory learning:
answer
understanding simple language through listening 4. understanding complex language through listening (in both quiet and noise)
question
Koch (1999) applies Eber's classic model in an approach to auditory development that integrates listening, producing speech, and developing language concepts. She includes the following four basic components of listening therapy:
answer
🍺auditory attention • perception/production • sound/object association • language and listening integration
question
Adaptive auditory skill development refers to
answer
the continual monitoring of a child's responses and adjustment of the level of difficulty of the task to bring about success or further challenge.
question
auditory learning" or "auditory communication
answer
Language, audition, and phonological acquisition are intricately related process that should be addressed in an integrated fashion.
question
Learning to Talk Around the Clock (Karen Rossi)
answer
• Concept is intended to guide the content of home visits conducted in natural settings.
question
signature behaviors
answer
behaviors in language and listening that foster development of spoken language
question
Other Resources for Parental Trainin
answer
• Hanen Early Language Resource Centre in Toronto o developed a plan for children with speech and language delay o provision of It Take Two to Talk o It Takes Two To Talk - The Hanen Centre • Infant Hearing Resource • Support for Learning American Sign Language (ASL) • Project SKI-HI o recently tested and developed the Deaf Mentor Programming o the program utilizes the services of adults who are Deaf as mentors and models of the language and culture o Mentor visits interacts with the child using ASL, while a parent advisor visits in order to help parents promote English acquisition
question
Bilingual-Bicultural?
answer
As previously stated under the Project SK-HI model, the Bilingual-Bicutural (Bi-Bi) incorporates two modes of communication: ASL and language acquisition. • Studies have shown that early bi-bi Deaf monitoring programming has made greater language gains during treatment.
question
Evaluations can be formal or informal measures of:
answer
o speech o language o listening o pragmatic skills o early literacy and learning
question
Roles of AR clinician inTypical Preschool Setting AR clinican MUST:
answer
ensure that the acoustic environment supports the child's need • determine if the room acoustics and teacher strategies support the child's learning • continue to have individual language learning need addressed by the professional •
question
Appropriate Practice = Beneficial Practice
answer
Decision making needs to be informed by knowledge 2. Goals are both challenging & achievable 3. Teaching needs to be both intentional & effective 4. High-quality learning experiences are provided
question
• During the early years of of the child's life, hearing families who have a child with D/HH require both
answer
informational and adjustment counseling (ASHA, 2008)
question
Adjustment Counseling
answer
describe adjustment to hearing loss counseling as the support professionals provide to families as they learn of their child's hearing loss and strive to recognize, acknowledge, and understand the realities of having a child with hearing loss
question
guide by your side program (GBYS)
answer
that is designed to offer parent-to-parent support at the time of diagnosis and in the next few months in the home visit setting
question
• Family-to family support groups are often effective when they address
answer
family-identified needs, may be family-led, and provide ample opportunities for networking with other families
question
Benefits of Support Group Interactions
answer
1. They enable members to recognize the universality of their feelings; members come to appreciate that others in the group have similar feelings 2. They give participants the opportunity to help one another 3. They become a powerful vehicle for imparting information
question
Assessment of School-Age Child Includes four general areas:
answer
1. Communication status, including audiologic and amplification issues, receptive and expressive language, and social communication skills 2. Overall participation variables of academic achievement, psychosocial adaptation, and prevocational and vocational skills 3. Related personal factor 4. Environments factors
question
• Basic monitoring of CI can include:
answer
1. Checking battery function. 2. Monitoring the child's ongoing ability to detect or discriminate the Ling sounds. 3. Use of a signal check device to monitor if a signal is being transmitted. 4. Checking all cords for shorts or intermittencies. 5. Keeping a supply of extra cords, magnets, and batteries.
question
Reverberation time (RT)
answer
is a measure of how long it takes before a sound is reduced by 60 DB once it is turned off.
question
In a typical classroom, RT is
answer
around 1.2 seconds.
question
sound treated classroom with carpets, tile, and solid core doors, RT can be
answer
on the order of 0.4 second.
question
CAPD
answer
central auditory processing disorder
question
CAPD involves
answer
either a delay in development, disordered development, or a specific central lesion.
question
CAPD may occur in isolation but CAPD often occurs in conjunction with
answer
ADHD, LD, autistic spectrum disorders, reading problems and speech deficits.