What Do We Want Them To Be When They Grow Up?

  1. Lyn Robertson
  1. Department of Education, Denison University, Granville, OH

Abstract

Learning to listen and speak are well-established preludes for reading, writing, and succeeding in mainstream educational settings. Intangibles beyond the ubiquitous test scores that typically serve as markers for progress in children with hearing loss are embedded in descriptions of the educational and social development of four young women. All were diagnosed with severe-to-profound or profound hearing loss as toddlers, and all were fitted with hearing aids and given listening and spoken language therapy. Compiling stories across the life span provides insights into what we can be doing in the lives of young children with hearing loss.

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This Article

  1. doi: 10.1044/hhdc20.1.27 Perspectives on Hearing and Hearing Disorders in Childhood vol. 20 no. 1 27-31