Wendy Scheffers, COMS Maya Delgado Greenberg, COMS

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Intervention Ideas Based on Characteristics
Advertisements

Every child talking Nursery Clusters. Supporting speech, language and communication skills Nursery Clusters Cluster 1 Listening, Attention and Auditory.
Community Awareness Rosalie O’Neale Content Assessment Section 12 September 2006.
Helping Your Child Learn to Read
Learning Disabilities According to the National Advisory Committee on Handicapped Children in 1967, a learning disability is a “disorder of one or more.
Specific Language Impairment in the Regular Classroom
Interpreting and Using ePIPS(P3,5,7) Feedback Glasgow 13 th February 2013.
Chapter 1 Perception. Ecological Approach to Perception James Gibson 1966, Perception is in “tune” with properties of the enviornment that are.
Stages of Literacy Ros Lugg. Beginning readers in the USA Looked at predictors of reading success or failure Pre-readers aged 3-5 yrs Looked at variety.
Functional Vision Assessment
Psikologi Anak Pertemuan 3 Motor, Sensory, and Perceptual Development.
Who’s Afraid of the Big Bad GPS? A Curriculum for GPS Assisted Travel With BrailleNote.
SPE 594-ExamII DOMAINS 1, 3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10, 11. Core Domain Area 1: Know Professional Information (8 Questions) 1.Know basic laws and regulations that.
Listening Tonja L. Root, Ed.D. Early Childhood & Reading Education Valdosta State University Valdosta, GA Root, T. (2008). Listening. Retrieved
Balanced Literacy J McIntyre Belize.
Elementary school teachers receive the least training in history content and instructional methods specific to social studies. Experienced teachers may.
Road Safety – Do you know the real facts? Additional supporting material can be found at
© 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Longman Publishers Chapter 2: Active Reading and Learning Efficient and Flexible Reading, 8/e Kathleen T.
Active Learning Presentation By: Diane Powell and Lori Enroth LilliWorks Active Learning Foundation Developed by Dr. Lilli Nielsen for.
CSD 5400 REHABILITATION PROCEDURES FOR THE HARD OF HEARING Auditory Training.
You need to use visual props to develop social thinking concepts. It’s not enough to use just words or worksheets. It needs to be visual. It needs to be.
Understanding the Process and the Product Professional Development Spring, 2012.
How to tell where you are without other people telling you where to go.
LECTURER IN EDUCATION RMS COLLEGE OF EDUCATION
Auditory Processing Disorder “A riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma.”
Newcomers You have the whole world in your hands!.
Supporting your child with reading.
Hearing Actual perception and processing of sound.
Chapter 2 Volume 1 Establishing and Maintaining Orientation for Mobility.
What is autism? Autism is a life long developmental disorder that affects a person’s ability to communicate, form relationships, and respond appropriately.
Picture Exchange Communication System (PECS) Hannah Coles Speech and Language Therapist Camden Language and Communication Service (CLCS) Camden ASD Provisions.
Ergonomics: Saving your Back and Arms Chapter
Speech and Language Impairments Erin Biermacher Kristen Yankoviak.
Finding Your Way: The BrailleNote GPS curriculum from the California School for the Blind.
Reading Fluency Chapter 5.
Presented by Kasey Markoski C.O.M.S Travelteacher.org Auditory Training and Development.
Classroom Strategies Classroom Strategies. Our classroom strategies are the most effective ways to build fluency, vocabulary, comprehension, and writing.
Active Listening Listening carefully to what the speaker is saying, without judgment or evaluation. Listening to both the content of the message as well.
Elements of Orientation: A Review of the Literature on the Concepts Used for Teaching Young Children who are Blind or Visually Impaired to Travel Age-
“Early Detection of Learning Disabilities – The Situation Today”. Lalitha Ramanujan Alpha to Omega Learning Centre 1.
LD/ADHD Initiative Executive Functions Modules Session Four Strategy Sheets Elementary.
Low Incidence Disabilities. Prevalence Very low incidence disabilities include those with prevalence rates between 1/10 th and ½ of a percent Three very.
Cognitive Information Processing Dr. K. A. Korb University of Jos.
Listening Tonja L. Root, Ed.D. Early Childhood & Reading Education Valdosta State University Valdosta, GA
One Step at a Time: Presentation 6 LISTENING SKILLS Introduction Initial Screen Skills Checklist Classroom Intervention Lesson Planning Teaching Method.
Speech Perception 4/4/00.
SPED 537: ECSE Methods Multiple Disabilities May 8-9, 2006 Deborah Chen, Ph.D. California State University, Northridge.
Early Behaviours and What to Look For EARLY READING BEHAVIOURS…
Listening Effectively
Hearing the Silent World The Bounce of Sound. TLA: Echolocate in Space Purpose: –Can you echolocate? What properties of objects can you detect? Ingredients.
Examination of balance PTP 565. Quote of the day The greatest crime is not developing your own potential. When you do what you do best, you are helping.
Reading Development Megan Shea.
KAMI KITT ASSISTIVE TECHNOLOGY Chapter 7 Human/ Assistive Technology Interface.
LD/ADHD Initiative Executive Functions Modules
Early Math for Infants and Toddlers. Pre-Knowledge Measure.
Perceptual attention Theories of attention Early selection Late selection Resource theories Repetition blindness and the attentional blink.
Decoding Dyslexia Parent Support Group October,
Access for Individuals who are visually impaired or blind Janet M. Barlow Accessible Design for the Blind 2015 Walking Summit October 29, 2015.
CVI Symposium Ellen Cadigan Mazel M.Ed., CTVI Perkins School for the Blind May 2015.
CHAPTER 8 MEMORY & INFORMATION PROCESSING
Listening Tonja L. Root, Ed.D. Early Childhood & Special Education Valdosta State University Valdosta, GA Root, T. (2012). Listening. Retrieved from.
1 Applying Principles To Reading Presented By Anne Davidson Michelle Diamond.
Dr Guita Movallali. How does Cued Speech help speech? Speech is much more complex than the ability to make speech sounds. It is necessary to know how.
Chapter 12 Children with Visual Impairments © Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.
 Over 50 percent of caseload  Over 30 percent had other impairments as primary diagnosis  Serve 3 times more students with visual and cognitive impairments.
Listening Tonja L. Root, Ed.D. Early Childhood & Reading Education Valdosta State University Valdosta, GA
Concept Development NYDBC Chris Russell.
The Auditory System.
Chapter 14: Early Childhood Physical Education
Chris Russell Hunter College SPED 746 Fall 2014
Presentation transcript:

Wendy Scheffers, COMS Maya Delgado Greenberg, COMS Listening for Orientation and Mobility: Hearing the Whole Picture, March 11, 2011 Wendy Scheffers, COMS Maya Delgado Greenberg, COMS

“Most people take their hearing for granted. I can’t “Most people take their hearing for granted. I can’t. My eyes are my handicap, but my ears are my opportunity. My ears show me what my eyes can’t. My ears tell me 99 percent of what I need to know about my world.” Ray Charles, 1987

For individuals with visual impairments, hearing becomes the primary compensatory sensory system for gathering environmental information beyond an arm’s reach.

What will we be covering today? Introduction to listening skills book and O&M chapter Overview of O&M listening skills Examples of listening skills and teaching strategies Discussion of Auditory Space Perception (ASP) and how to teach it Wrap up and questions

Learning to Listen, Listening to Learn: Teaching Listening Skills to Students Who are Visually Impaired A book from American Foundation for the Blind In press, anticipated release in fall 2011 Liz Barclay, editor

Chapters include listening skills for: Infants through high school Students with additional disabilities Students who are learning English as a second language Students with learning disabilities Students who are deaf-blind Orientation and Mobility

LISTENING SKILLS FOR ORIENTATION AND MOBILITY – HEARING THE WHOLE PICTURE Developmental organization of content from infancy through adults Listening skills for each phase of development in bulleted lists Teaching strategies and sample activities Vignettes Functional assessment of hearing

Brainstorming What listening skills are involved in this vignette?

O&M listening skills include: awareness and comparison of sounds association of objects and their sounds identification of sounds sound localization identification of environments or activities based on sets of associated sounds auditory attention span auditory figure-ground use of sounds as landmarks and reference points to establish orientation in a familiar area

And… auditory space perception (ASP) sound tracking auditory memory and sequencing ability to listen to verbal information and ask clarifying questions use of sounds to create and update a mental map of the environment while traveling recognition of “danger sounds” and quick response use of technology, such as computers with speech output, to access auditory travel information

Sound localization and tracking Sound localization: The ability to detect the direction and distance of a sound source (and orient and move in relation to that sound) Sound tracking: The ability to track and/or move in relation to a moving sound source

A young man listens for the sound of the approaching bus

Sound localization and tracking Teach skills in order of difficulty Child stationary with a stationary sound source Child stationary with a moving sound source Child moving in relation to a stationary sound source Child moving in relation to a moving sound source

Auditory Figure Ground Figure-ground: the ability to attend to one sound, the figure, out of a sea of background sound. Soundscapes: “acoustic environments that include both natural and human-made sound” (Ferrington, 2003, p. 43).

An elementary school age girl uses listening skills to locate and use a slide on a playground.

A teenager uses listening skills to analyze traffic patterns and select a safe time to cross the street

Auditory Figure Ground Activities Go on sound hunts. When in a complex soundscape, such as a mall or party, ask the person to listen to different sounds.

Identification of environments or activities based on sets of associated sounds Children learn to identify activities and places by their sounds between the ages of three and four (Anderson, Boigon, Davis, & deWaard, 2007). They come to associate a set of sounds with a particular environment.

A three year old boy reaches out from his seat in a grocery cart to touch the fruit in the produce section of the grocery store.

Functional assessment of hearing There are five items, including the following: Does the child have difficulty focusing on a specific sound source in a noisy environment, or become easily distracted by environmental sounds? This could be an indication of an auditory figure ground problem. Consider referring to a speech and language pathologist for further assessment.

Auditory Space Perception Using acoustic cues to locate silent objects and detect properties of objects and space, including the ability to: Detect location, size, shape, density, and distance of silent objects Determine characteristics of space, including size, layout, and types of objects within the space.

“When our ability to decode spatial attributes is sufficiently developed using a wide range of acoustic cues, we can readily visualize objects and spatial geometry: we can ‘see’ with our ears.” (Blesser & Salter, 2007, p.2)

Auditory Space Perception Three ways that silent objects are detected: Echolocation Sound shadows Low frequency ambient sound waves

Emerging understanding of ASP through users and research For example: Dan Kish, famous O&M instructor who teaches use of ASP Research about the types of auditory space perception (Ashmead et al, 1998) Recent research about the best type of sound to use for echolocation (Martinez et al, 2009)

Sound shadow group activity Raise your hand when you hear presence of a sound shadow (something blocking access to direct sound)

Sound shadow and/or reflected sound? Materials to use to illustrate and teach beginning use of sound shadows or reflected sound: Box Cookie sheet

Sample strategies for teaching echolocation - start: Indoors With large objects or hard wall surfaces At close distances With student stationary or walk with human guide

For more information Purchase the book: Learning to Listen, Listening to Learn: Teaching Listening Skills to Students who are Visually Impaired American Foundation for the Blind In press, anticipated release in fall 2011 Or purchase an epublication of our chapter, Listening Skills for Orientation and Mobility – Hearing the Whole Picture, at AFB online bookstore at www.afb.org

Infants and young children learn to attach meaning to sound Infants and young children learn to attach meaning to sound.  Some of the emerging listening skills that develop at this age include: Notice sound Listen to a specific sound Localize the position of the sound source Compare how sounds are same/similar/different from other sounds Notice if a sound is loud or soft Notice if a sound is high or low Notice if a sound is long or short Identify common sounds Associate sounds with objects Reach toward a sound Move toward and away from sound Determine if a sound is near or far Determine if a space is small or large from reflected and reverberated sound Identify a familiar location by listening to environmental sounds

Emerging skills for young school-aged children who are listening to acquire orientation information include: Stay focused on auditory information for several minutes, increasing the number of minutes over time Localize sound while moving Travel to or away from an intermittent source of sound Hear if a space is big or small Hear the presence of silent objects Use hearing to detect features of silent objects, such as size, shape, and density Identify people, objects, and activities auditorily Identify familiar and unfamiliar locations by listening to environmental sounds Use sound sources for orientation and to create a mental map Listen to a specific sound within a noisy environment Understand spoken information Remember verbal directions in the correct order Listen for car sounds before crossing the street (with adult supervision)

Emerging listening skills for preteens and teenagers who are applying auditory information to community travel include: Use auditory space perception while traveling in complex environments Determine the relative speed of moving sound-making objects (i.e. slow or fast). Align body and line of travel parallel or perpendicular in relation to the sound of moving vehicles Update mental map of current location by listening to sounds Selectively listen to one sound within complex soundscapes Listen to verbal information and ask clarifying questions Recall multiple step directions in the correct sequence Recognize “danger sounds” and respond quickly Locate correct position to cross the street Determine if an intersection is a safe place to cross based on sound Select a safe timing to cross the street based on sound Monitor traffic sounds during street crossings to ensure it is safe to continue the crossing Use technology to access auditory travel information