916 resultados para Speech, language, and hearing sciences
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This paper is a review of the literature regarding design of classrooms for hearing impaired children.
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This paper discusses a survey undertaken to review information on hearing loss distributed by St. Louis area hospitals and pediatricians.
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This paper presents a study of the effectiveness of a neonatal hearing screener (the GSI AUDIOscreener, which is usually used in hospitals to test newborns), in a pediatrician's offices to test infants and children up to age 5-1/2 years.
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This paper addresses the importance of the development of social skills for deaf and hard of hearing preschool children. The author presents social skills lessons and activities for teachers to use with preschool children.
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This paper examines the visual speech processing abilities of older adults and the age-related effects on speechreading abilities.
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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.
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This paper discusses language and intelligence tests for hearing impaired children.
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This paper discusses the influence of rhythm in teaching of hearing impaired children.
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This paper studies the auditory, visual and combined audio-visual recognition of vowels by severely and profoundly hearing impaired children.
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This paper discusses the results of a study of social studies textbooks suitable for hearing impaired children.
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This paper discusses early intervention programs in accordance with IDEA for hearing impaired children.
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This paper is studied look at the Teacher’s Assessment of Grammatical Structures (TAGS), Teacher Assessment of Spoken Language (TASL), and Cottage Acquisition Scales for Listening, Language and Speech (CASLLS) criterion-referenced language assessments as well as an inquiry into how teachers of the deaf use the TAGS currently as a teaching tool.
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This paper discusses three approaches to speech development in hearing-impaired children: auditory-verbal, association phoneme unit method, and multi-sensory.
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This paper evaluates the directional effects of two hearing devices – an antique London Dome horn style device and a constructed Cupped Hand. The comparisons were made using the Quick SIN (Speech in Noise) adaptive test which measures signal-to-noise ratio loss.
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Recognizing emotions are something children do everyday, whether it is identifying that mom is sad because she lost her job or that a character in a story is mad because no one will listen to him. The purpose of this study is to find out if recognizing emotions is easier to do with realistic photographs or illustrations.