24 resultados para Children and the aged
em School of Medicine, Washington University, United States
Resumo:
This paper discusses common issues deaf educators face that are not directly related to a child’s hearing impairment and thus often outside the educators’ area of expertise. The study also identifies a range of emotions early interventionists experience while working with children with multiple impairments.
Resumo:
The primary goal of this project is to study the ability of adult cochlear implant users to perceive emotion through speech alone. A secondary goal of this project is to study the development of emotion perception in normal hearing children to serve as a baseline for comparing emotion perception abilities in similarly-aged children with impaired hearing.
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This paper examines two individually administered diagnostic reading tests, the Woodcock Reading Mastery Tests and the Diagnostic Reading Scales, to determine their value for use with hearing-impaired children.
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This paper compares two language evaluation tests--Development Sentence Analysis and the CID Grammatical Analysis of Elicited Language: Simple Sentence Level.
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This paper discusses visual-motor tests and reading tests for hearing impaired children.
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This paper reviews a study to determine the applicabilty of the Wechsler-Bellevue and the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for severely hearing impaired children.
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This paper discusses the Hiskey Test of learning ability and its use on hearing impaired and normal hearing children.
The structural component of linguistic meaning and the reading of normally hearing and deaf children
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This paper discusses an experiment in psycholinguistic method and its application to the field of education.
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This paper discusses a study to determine if the use of a typewriter had an effect on the reading ability of hearing impaired children.
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This paper discusses the results of a survey about awareness of the American with Disabilities Act.
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This paper discusses the Stanford and Peabody tests for achievement and which test is more efficient for hearing impaired children.
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This study uses the Deese-Roediger-McDermott paradigm to investigate how deaf children with cochlear implants organize their semantic networks as compared to their hearing age-mates.
Resumo:
This paper presents materials for educators and students, grades K-6, about hearing and hearing impairment that will help prepare them for more successful mainstreaming and inclusion of hearing-impaired children.