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Text Comprehension For Deaf And Hard Of Hearing Students Literature Review

¶ … Comprehension and Deafness Language and vocabulary development and therefore reading comprehension, among deaf and hard of hearing children is challenged due to several factors. These factors relate to inherent differences between children with normal hearing and those with hearing difficulties. However, efforts and innovation have been put into practice to facilitate language and reading development among deaf and hard of hearing students in order to achieve successful comprehension despite their inabilities to learn through conventional methods. It is important that reading development is maintained at a high level to ensure hard of hearing students are able to maintain comprehension and age appropriate and grade appropriate levels. The following discussion outlines some issues and challenges faced by children with hearing difficulties and how these problems can be overcome in order to achieve effective levels of language, vocabulary, and text comprehension.

Vocabulary comprehension is encouraged and promoted through the activity of reading to children. Reading aloud to normal children provides them with incidental exposure to language, thus improving acquisition of vocabulary (Cannon et al., 2010). Deaf and hard of hearing students are not able to this effective strategy for vocabulary development, so alternative methods and strategies must be utilized by parents and teachers. This is important considering that reduced reading to children generally results in a lack of world knowledge (Cannon et al., 2010). Cannon et al. (2010) investigated an alternative procedure that utilized video recorded books read in American Sign Language available...

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Effectiveness of Vocabulary acquisition was assessed by measuring whether the intervention increased these students' abilities to produce written words in American Sign Language.
Results of this study indicated that in order for the DVD books the to be effective in promoting the development of vocabulary as demonstrated through increased signing of learned words, the target words needed to be taught prior to exposure to the DVD books (Cannon et al., 2010). The DVD books then further confirmed the learned words, and vocabulary recognition among these deaf students was observed to increase even after first exposure to the pre-teaching component (Cannon et al., 2010). These findings present an important direction for future research and development, focused on the creation of DVD books with accompanying lesson components for deaf and hard of hearing students in order to promote language development.

Efforts toward development of educational material aimed at language and vocabulary for deaf students is of high importance in order to increase reading comprehension among this population, which is persistently low (Kelly, 2003). These difficulties may stem in great part from deficits in automaticity in word recognition and parsing sentence patterns among deaf students, which may be improved through effective practice (Kelly, 2003). Initiatives in the development of practice strategies to improve automaticity and thus reading comprehension among deaf student were examined by Kelly (2003). This author noted the necessity of…

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Cannon, J.E., Fredrick, L.D., Easterbrooks, S.R. (2010). Vocabulary instruction through books read in American sign language for English-language learners with hearing loss. Communication Disorders Quarterly, 31(2), 98-112.

Kelly, L.P. (2003). Considerations for designing practice for deaf readers. Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 8(2), 171-86.

Luetke-Stahlman, B., Nielsen, D.C. (2003). The contribution of phonological awareness and receptive and expressive English to the reading ability of deaf students with varying degrees of exposure to accurate English. Journal of Deaf Studies and Deaf Education, 8(4), 464-84.

Mayer, C., Akamatsu, C.T. (2000). Deaf children creating written texts: contributions of American sign language and signed forms of English. American Annals of the Deaf, 145(5), 394-403.
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