
There is a growing realization that many adolescents with hearing loss require special attention. Despite the benefits of early diagnosis, early amplification, and early intervention, some adolescents with hearing loss do not achieve age-equivalent developmental milestones. The purpose of this book is to assist auditory (re)habilitation practitioners in mitigating the negative effects of hearing loss on communicative, socio-emotional, and academic performance of adolescents who rely on auditory-based spoken language to communicate. It is essential that adolescents whose parents chose auditory-based spoken language receive systematic, consistent, well-planned, appropriate auditory (re)habilitation.In Auditory (Re)Habilitation for Adolescents with Hearing Loss, Jill Duncan, Ellen A. Rhoades, and Elizabeth Fitzpatrick provide practitioners with key milestones considered fundamental to understanding adolescents with hearing loss as well as a pedagogical foundation and general intervention strategies for both planning and direct face-to-face (re)habilitation with adolescents. The authors summarize important issues related to the spoken language development of adolescents, focus on aspects of communication that are functionally relevant to adolescents with hearing loss, and provide strategies for facilitating auditory-based spoken communication skills. They conclude with a discussion of factors influencing auditory (re)habilitation, both in service delivery and outcomes, and provide the application of theory to practice through a demonstration of case studies.
This book investigates the specific developmental and communicative challenges faced by adolescents with hearing loss who utilize auditory-based spoken language. The authors, Elizabeth M. Fitzpatrick, Ellen A. Rhoades, and Jill Duncan, draw upon clinical expertise and pedagogical research to address why early intervention does not always guarantee age-equivalent milestones. They present a structured framework for practitioners to improve the socio-emotional, academic, and communicative outcomes of this demographic through systematic, evidence-based intervention strategies.
What You Will Find
Experts in the field of audiology and speech-language pathology identify this work as a critical resource for practitioners seeking to bridge the gap between early intervention and adolescent independence. Readers frequently note the practical utility of the case studies in applying complex theoretical concepts to real-world clinical settings.
Page Count:
448
Publication Date:
2014-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199700834
ISBN-13:
9780199700837
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