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Language Development Bilateral English Speaking

SUMMARY OF CHILDREN WITH BILATERAL HEARING LOSS WITH NORMAL COGNITIVE DEVELOPMENT

2014 Results:

  • Acquiring an age-appropriate lexicon is a challenge for many children with 47% demonstrating significant delays
  • Typically children scored more poorly on cognitive-linguistic items compared to more concrete/routine language items
  • Typically language quotients were higher (by 7 to 15 points) for children who had:
    • No additional disabilities
      Intervention by 6 months of age
    • Mild or moderate hearing loss
    • Deaf parent(s)
    • Unilateral hearing loss
    • Parents whose written language was English
    • Mothers with degrees beyond a HS diploma

2015 Results:

  • Acquiring an age-appropriate lexicon is a challenge for many children with bilateral hearing loss with 57% of the group demonstrating significant delays
  • Typically language quotients were higher (by 6 to 19 points) for children who:
    • Were less than 2 years of age
    • Had mild or moderate hearing loss
    • Had mothers with B.A. degrees or higher
    • Were identified by 3 months and in intervention by 6 months of age
    • Had deaf parent(s)

NECAP 2014 powerpoint


NECAP 2015 powerpoint

The Marion Downs Center Research team and Hands & Voices are proud to collaborate in bringing this site to you.

This web site has been developed as a partnership between the University of Colorado Boulder/Marion Downs Center and Hands & Voices. These pages contain research and information for researchers, practicing audiologists, teachers of the deaf, speech/language pathologists and early intervention providers providing services to families and children who are deaf or hard of hearing. Research information on the auditory skills, speech, language, cognitive, and social-emotional development of infants and children who are deaf or hard of hearing will be provided on this website.
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Hands & Voices and the Marion Downs Center Research team are proud to be co-partnering on this web site and working in collaboration to provide research and information that assists all those interested in assisting deaf and hard of hearing children and their families. Hands & Voices is a national non-profit parent-driven organization that provides communication-unbiased information, educational advocacy, parent-mentoring and much more to families with children who are deaf or hard of hearing, and to the professionals who serve them. www.handsandvoices.org

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