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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

A speech intelligibility test for young deaf children.

Blevins, Bill G. 01 January 1960 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
2

The Impact of Language Input on Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing Preschool Children Who Use Listening and Spoken Language

Rufsvold, Ronda L. January 2018 (has links)
The purpose of the study was to investigate the influence of the quantity of adult language input on their deaf and hard-of-hearing preschool children and to explore the effects, if any, on the child’s quantity of language, vocabulary development, and basic concept understanding. Using audio recording and the Language ENvironment Analysis (LENA) software, the study involved 30 preschool children with hearing loss who used spoken language as their communication modality and 7 children with normal hearing. Their language and the language spoken to them in all waking-hours of a two-day period (16 hours per day) were recorded and analyzed quantitatively as adult word counts (AWC), child vocalizations (CVC), and conversational turns (CTC). These components were compared to the child’s performance on the Boehm Test of Basic Concepts (BTBC-3) and the Peabody Picture Vocabulary Test (PPVT-4) to investigate if the quantity of language input had an effect on the child’s usage of vocabulary and basic concepts. Correlations were found between the amount of adult words, child vocalizations, and conversational turns across weekends and weekdays, but not on BTBC-3 or PPVT-4 scores. Interestingly, there were no significant differences between adult word counts and child vocalizations as a function of the child’s hearing loss, indicating parents of deaf or hard-of-hearing children are using as many words with their children as parents of children with normal hearing. Additionally, scores on the BTBC-3 and PPVT-4 were correlated with each other, but there wasn’t a statistically significant difference between the mean scores for children with normal hearing and the children with hearing loss, indicating both groups scored similarly on the assessment. Results from this study suggest the language used around children impacts their language use and the amount of interactions they have in their environment. This is significant because it identifies the influence of the quantity of adult language input on the child’s language development.
3

The relationship of education policy to language and cognition in deaf children

Shannon-Gutierrez, Priscilla 01 January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
4

Développement des habiletés phonologiques précoces et apprentissage de la lecture et de l'écriture chez l'enfant sourd: apport du langage parlé complété (LPC) / Early phonological skills development and acquisition of literacy in deaf children: effect of Cued Speech (CS)

Colin, Stéphanie M.L. 09 June 2004 (has links)
De nombreuses études longitudinales ont montré un lien causal entre habiletés phonologiques précoces et plus tard le développement de la lecture et de l’écriture chez l’enfant entendant (Bryant, MacLean, Bradley & Crossland, 1990). Pour apporter une contribution aux connaissances concernant ce lien chez les enfants sourds, nous avons réalisé une étude longitudinale qui s’échelonne de la troisième maternelle à la seconde primaire. Les performances d’enfants sourds sévères et profonds prélinguaux exposés (précocement vs tardivement) ou non au Langage Parlé Complété (« LPC », code manuel destiné à lever l’ambiguïté de la lecture labiale seule) sont comparées à celles d’enfants entendants de même âge chronologique. Diverses épreuves phonologiques, de lecture et d’écriture ont été proposées. Les résultats ont montré que les habiletés phonologiques précoces prédisaient le niveau de reconnaissance de mots écrits en première primaire chez les enfants sourds comme chez les enfants entendants. Cependant, un effet plus important de l’apprentissage de la lecture est observé sur le niveau d’habiletés phonologiques, de lecture et d’écriture lors des deux premières primaires chez les enfants sourds. De plus, les performances des enfants sourds exposés précocement au LPC ne diffèrent pas de celles des enfants entendants et sont plus élevées que celles des autres enfants sourds, en particulier en première et seconde primaire. L’exposition précoce au LPC permettrait donc le développement de représentations phonologiques précises et par conséquent l’utilisation d’un décodage phonologique efficace en lecture et en écriture au début de l’apprentissage de la lecture. / Longitudinal studies have shown a causal connection between early phonological skills and later literacy development in hearing children (Bryant, MacLean, Bradley & Crossland, 1990). The aim of our study is to investigate whether early phonological skills predict later literacy performance in deaf children either exposed (early versus late) or not exposed to Cued Speech (“CS”, a manual system delivering phonetically augmented speechreading through the visual modality). Different phonological and literacy tasks were administered from kindergarten to seconde grade. The results show that the early phonological skills in kindergarten predict written word recognition in first grade in the deaf as well as in the hearing groups. However, an effect of learning to read seems to be more important on the level of phonological and literacy skills during the first and seconde grade in deaf children. In addition, the performances of early CS users do not differ from those of hearing children and are higher than those of the other deaf children, especially in first and second grade. Early exposure to Cued Speech may permit the development of accurate phonological representations and, consequently, the use of accurate phonological decoding to recognize written words and to spell at an early stage in learning to read. / Doctorat en sciences psychologiques / info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
5

Social-emotional competency : enhancing the achievement abilities of deaf and hard-of-hearing persons

Viljoen, Tasme 01 1900 (has links)
South Africa has a dearth of deaf appropriate assistive resources – giving rise to deaf adolescents leaving school early and poor adult outcomes. These factors are negatively influenced by the interaction of other elements such as the inadequate cultural and social nurturing and lack of support. Approached from a bio-ecological model, to pro-actively address the support needed by deaf and hard-of-hearing persons to empower them to develop the capacity to withstand the challenges they have to endure, to stand up to and resist the negative ideas about what they are capable of. In this study, major risk factors were identified as communication deprivation and unpreparedness of parents to raise a deaf child appropriately where mediating factors were identified as social-emotional competence and deaf teaching assistants at South African Schools for the Deaf. The main findings of this study were that the need for early training of parents, access to Sign Language, deaf role models and social-emotional training in SA schools for the Deaf are proposed pathways to well-being. / Psychology / M.A. (Psychology)

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