What is Auditory-Oral?
What is hearing to establish spoken language
What is ASL?
What is primary language of deaf community
What is Auditory-Verbal?
What is a unisensory method focusing on sound only, discourages use of visual cues
What is CUED speech?
What is combination of locations and handshapes give information
What is Tactile Sign?
What is language for people both deaf and blind
When is Auditory-Oral recommended?
What is for children who are deaf or hard of hearing
When is ASL recommended?
What is for deaf community that is not visually impaired.
When is Auditory-Verbal recommended?
What is when children who are deaf or hard of hearing are first diagnosed to take advantage of critical periods
When is Cued Speech recommended?
What is for literacy of Deaf children
When is Tactile Sign recommended?
What is for Deaf/Blind community
What are the strengths of Auditory-Oral as a mode?
What is focus on spoken language and listening skills development
What are the strengths of ASL as a mode?
What is helps break down communication barriers and allows people to express themselves without spoken language.
What are the strengths of Auditory-Verbal as a mode?
What is focusing on listening skills and giving access to a hearing world
What are the strengths of Cued Speech as a mode?
What is increased access to spoken language, can support the development of spoken language, literacy outcomes, creates phonemic awareness and generally easy for speakers to learn
What are the strengths of Tactile Sign as a mode?
What is access for both blind and deaf people to have access to language and personal connections to the people signing with you
What are the key components to Auditory-Oral?
What is auditory training and spoken language development
What are the key components to ASL?
What is own vocab, syntax, and grammar, intonation=facial expressions, and visual language
What are the key components to Auditory-Verbal?
What is auditory only modality with emphasis on no visual cues and listening skills development
What are the key components to Cued Speech?
What is you use speechreading cues and the “cues”, does not require the use of spoken language, for the person watching (e.g. person with hearing differences) a visual cue is produced for each sound spoken and cues are produced for the sound not the spelling
What are the key components to Tactile Sign?
What is physical contact and contextual cues
What do we need to be aware of when discussing Auditory-Oral?
What is individual differences and listening to the patient
What do we need to be aware of when discussing ASL?
What is it is not signs for English words
What do we need to be aware of when discussing Auditory-Verbal?
What is may not be perceived as natural and technology development
What do we need to be aware of when discussing CUED speech?
What is speakers must learn a coding system, itself is not a language, just a means of access to spoken language, and does not itself require or support spoken language (if that is a goal) without other services
What do we need to be aware of when discussing Tactile Sign?
What is understanding the importance behind context and being flexible with the signer