About Me

My photo
I am just a mom: a mom of three kids and one of them is hearing impaired. We are a busy family and I am a very busy mom. I want my hearing impaired daughter, Brooke, to have every advantage so I try to incorporate as many lessons and strategies into our every day life. Most of the teaching I do with Brooke is incorporated into our daily routines and parent-directed play. This blog will include some of our formal lessons but mostly it will be learning to listen in the everyday.

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Extending Vocabulary

One piece of advice we received during our visit to Chapel Hill on Monday was to work on extending Brooke's vocabulary. For example she know the word "same" but doesn't understand the word "alike". She uses "big" and "small" really well but needs to add some more synonyms for those words. So we have been trying a few new things around here that incorporate into our daily life. With a little focus by me, we are extending her vocabulary.
1. Use active listening to show your child you are listening; create opportunities for your child to comment and add to your thoughts. Create pockets of time in which you really talk with your child. When Brooke brings up and idea or topic, I try to keep the conversation going for a few minutes and include her brother and sister. She loves to talk about things so she really enjoys these conversations.
2. Restate what your child says, using slightly more advanced, new vocabulary. For example, if she says, "Did you see that house by the water? It was big!" respond by saying, "I did- the cabin next to the creek was gigantic!"
3. As your child talks, ask "how" and "why" questions to help her extend and analyze her thoughts. Wonder out loud, for example, how the cabin was build or why the family chose to build it on the creek. Doing so allows your child to use new vocabulary to talk about abstract thoughts, rather than simply talking about the concrete objects that are right in front of her.

The more Brooke is able to hear and understand, the more likely she will begin to use the new words in her vocabulary.

Monday, July 18, 2011

Our appointments

Brooke had an audiology appointment today at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Though it is a four hour drive from our home, the care we receive is well worth the trip.

To begin our appointment Brooke goes into the testing booth. It is really small sound-proof room with all of the equipment needed to test Brooke's hearing.

Without her hearing aids, Brooke listens for sounds that come through those blue and red wires clipped to the back of her dress. The tubes from the wires are placed into her ears through her ear molds. The therapist wears headphone and can hear the audiologist who sits in the booth through the window. The audiologist plays "beeps" and Brooke places a token into the pig when she hears the sound. The "beeps" are played along different frequencies until she hears it and responds.


Then we move into another room for her hearing aids to be programed. The audiologist uses Brooke's responses from the testing booth and the computer will programs her hearing aids to her exact needs.



This is Brooke with Paula, our audiologist. Paula has taken exceptional care of us over the last 3 years.