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Georgia State University Series: Oral Approaches and Philosophies Part 2, Presentation 2 July 2001 Oral Approaches and Philosophies Dr. Easterbrooks Philosophy of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Georgia State University Series:


1
Georgia State University Series
  • Oral Approaches and Philosophies

Part 2, Presentation 2 July 2001
2
OralApproaches and Philosophies
  • Dr. Easterbrooks

3
Philosophy of Oral Education
  • The goal of oral education is for deaf and
    hard-of-hearing children to learn to listen,
    speak, and to understand spoken language.
  • Children who are educated with the oral approach
    develop listening skills with the use of current
    auditory technology, including digital hearing
    aids and cochlear implants, and specific teaching
    strategies.
  • The oral approach allows speechreading to help
    deaf and hard-of-hearing children to understand
    language.

4
Elements of successful oral deaf education
  • Children can maximize their auditory potential
    all day when taught in environments where they
    are expected to learn to listen and speak.
  • Spoken language is the only language used by
    children at all times.
  • The curriculum prepares children for
    mainstreaming.

5
History of oral deaf education
  • As early as the 16th century, a Benedictine monk
    named Pedro Ponce de Leon tutored the deaf
    children of the Spanish nobility using oral deaf
    methods.
  • In the 18th century, a German teacher named
    Samuel Heinicke developed the foundations of
    modern oral deaf education. He was the first
    advocate of what we now call mainstreaming.

6
Continued
  • It was not until the end of the 19th century when
    educators began to develop the role that residual
    hearing could have in the oral education of the
    deaf.
  • Dr. Max Goldstein developed the notion of
    audition (the use of residual hearing) as an
    integral part of oral education

7
Continued
  • After World War II, when many veterans returned
    with hearing loss, the government funded research
    on hearing aids, which became powerful enough to
    benefit even profoundly deaf children.
  • As a result, children were able to use their
    residual hearing as well as visual cues to learn
    to speak.

8
Auditory Training
  • Auditory training activities form a major
    component of oral education.
  • The goal of auditory training for children who
    are deaf or hard of hearing is to develop their
    ability to recognize speech using the auditory
    signal to interpret auditory experiences.

9
Types of Auditory Training(or Spoken Language
Instruction)
  • Auditory-Verbal
  • Auditory-Oral

10
Auditory-Verbal Philosophy
  • Encourages the maximum use of hearing in order
    to learn language and stresses listening rather
    than watching.

11
Essentials of Auditory-Verbal Philosophy
  • Young children who are deaf or hard of hearing
    can be educated to use even minimal amounts of
    amplified residual hearing.
  • Use of amplified residual hearing permits the
    child to learn to listen, process verbal
    language, and to speak.

12
Auditory-Verbal Approach
  • This approach is similar to the auditory-oral
    approach except it does not encourage lipreading.
  • It excludes the use of sign language.
  • This method emphasizes the exclusive use of
    auditory skills through one-on-one teaching.
  • It emphasizes the importance of placing children
    in the regular education classroom as soon as
    possible.
  • It views parents as the childs primary teacher.

13
Prerequisites for Auditory-Verbal Approach
  • Early identification of hearing loss.
  • Early fitting of appropriate amplification.
  • Emphasis on learning to listen.
  • Regular therapy sessions with certified
    auditory-verbal professionals.
  • Mainstreaming in education.
  • Total family participation in the learning
    process.

14
Auditory-Verbal Practice
  • Auditory-verbal practice is the application of
    techniques, strategies, conditions, and
    procedures that promote optimal acquisition of
    spoken language through listening.

15
Goal of Auditory-Verbal Practice
  • Children who are deaf or hard of hearing can
    grow up in regular learning and living
    environments enabling them to become independent,
    participating, and contributing citizens in
    society.

16
Who Can Benefit from Auditory-Verbal Practice?
  • With appropriate hearing aids, cochlear
    implants, and other technology, most children who
    are deaf or hard of hearing can benefit from
    auditory-verbal practice if it is begun early.
  • The critical period for the development of
    spoken language (as a first language) ends by the
    time a child enters school.

17
Auditory-Oral Approach
  • The auditory-oral approach is a method in which
    children learn to use whatever hearing they have,
    in combination with lipreading and contextual
    cues (speechreading) to understand and use spoken
    language.

18
Components of a SuccessfulAuditory-Oral Approach
  • Requires full time immersion in spoken language
  • Infants and very young children need to be
    "bathed" in spoken language by their caregivers.
  • Small classes and daily one-on-one instruction
    provide the intense earliest intervention that
    makes oral deaf education successful.

19
Technology Benefits of the Auditory-Oral Approach
  • More recently, the cochlear implant and other
    new technology have maximized auditory potential
    of deaf and hard-of-hearing children for whom
    analog hearing aids previously provided little or
    no benefit.

20
Private oral deaf education schools and programs
  • OPTION schools and programs are an international
    council of private and independent schools that
    provide auditory-oral education for deaf and
    hard-of-hearing children.
  • OPTION schools and programs support early
    intervention and oral education with the goal of
    mainstreaming the deaf and hard-of-hearing child.
  • The primary criterion for membership in OPTION is
    that the school supports and provides
    auditory-oral philosophy and practice.

21
Continued
  • The leadership of the OPTION schools must be
    active and contributing members of the Alexander
    Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of
    Hearing.
  • All OPTION schools have classes for deaf and
    hard-of-hearing children, and offer a variety of
    other services including parent education,
    individual therapy, diagnostics and mainstream
    support.

22
Public oral deaf education schools and programs
  • The Public School Caucus (PSC) is the umbrella
    organization of public schools with oral deaf
    education programs, much as OPTION is the
    umbrella for private schools.
  • Like OPTION, the PSC is independent of, but
    requires membership in, the Alexander Graham Bell
    Association for the Deaf and Hard of Hearing as a
    criterion for membership.
  • PSC and OPTION members often work together to
    achieve their common goals.

23
Auditory Habilitation Summary
  • Listening and speech skills do not emerge
    spontaneously.
  • Therefore, concentrated, deliberate
    rehabilitation is required.
  • Child learns to utilize the electrical signal for
    the purpose of speech recognition and speech and
    language acquisition.
  • Must include participation by the parents, speech
    and hearing professionals, and educators.

24
Glossary
  • Amplification Provision of increased intensity
    of sound.
  • Auditory-only Speech that is presented to only
    the auditory modality
  • Auditory training Instruction designed to
    maximize an individuals use of residual hearing
    by means of both formal and informal listening
    practice.
  • Auditory-verbal therapy An educational approach
    in which technology, techniques, and strategies
    are used to enable children to listen and
    understand spoken language, with a primary
    emphasis on the auditory modality for learning.
  • Aural habilitation Intervention for persons who
    have not developed listening, speech, and
    language skills.

25
Continued
  • Aural/oral method An instruction method used to
    teach children with significant hearing loss
    using hearing, speechreading, and spoken
    language, but not manual communication.
  • Aural rehabilitation Intervention aimed at
    minimizing and alleviating the communication
    difficulties associated with hearing loss.
  • Cochlear implant Device planted in the skull
    that permits persons with deafness to receive
    stimulation of the auditory mechanism directly
    stimulates the auditory nerve by means of
    electrical current.
  • Hard-of-hearing HOH having a hearing loss
    usually not used to refer to a profound hearing
    loss.

26
Continued
  • Lipreading The process of recognizing speech
    using only the visual speech signal and other
    visual cues, such as facial expression.
  • Mainstreaming Reassignment of children with
    disabilities from a special education classroom
    to a classroom in the regular school environment.
  • Residual hearing The hearing remaining in a
    person who has hearing loss.
  • Speechreading Speech recognition using auditory
    and visual cues.

27
References
  • Reference for slides 6, 9-11
  • Estabrooks, W., Marlowe, J. (2000). The baby
    is listening An educational tool for
    professionals who work with children who are deaf
    or hard of hearing.Washington, DC The Alexander
    Graham Bell Association for the Deaf and Hard of
    Hearing.
  • Reference for slides 2-3, 23-26
  • Tye-Murray, N. (1998). Foundations of aural
    rehabilitation. San Diego, CA Singular
    Publishing Group, Inc.

28
Continued
  • Reference for slides 12-16, 18, 20-22
  • http//www.oraldeafed.org/library
    /about/index.html
  • Reference for slide 8
  • http//www.nciohio.com/prerequi.htm
  • Reference for slide 17
  • http//www.bradingrao.com/auditory1.htm
  • Reference for slide 4
  • http//www.listen-up.org/options1.htm
  • Slides 5, 7, and 19 are unaccounted for, but Im
    positive they came from one of the above sources
    or from the following website
  • http//www.auditory-verbal.org/
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