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Predictors of early reading skill in 5-year-old children with hearing loss who use spoken language
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Phonological awareness and early reading skills in children with cochlear implants
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Outcomes of 3-year-old children with hearing loss and different types of additional disabilities
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Language and speech perception of young children with bimodal fitting or bilateral cochlear implants
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Outcomes of 3-Year-Old Children With Hearing Loss and Different Types of Additional Disabilities
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Predictors of Early Reading Skill in 5-Year-Old Children With Hearing Loss Who Use Spoken Language
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Abstract:
This research investigated the concurrent association between early reading skills and phonological awareness (PA), print knowledge, language, cognitive, and demographic variables in 101 5-year-old children with prelingual hearing losses ranging from mild to profound who communicated primarily using spoken language. All participants were fitted with hearing aids (n = 71) or cochlear implants (n = 30). They completed standardized assessments of PA, receptive vocabulary, letter knowledge, word and non-word reading, passage comprehension, math reasoning, and nonverbal cognitive ability. Multiple regressions revealed that PA (assessed using judgments of similarity based on words’ initial or final sounds) made a significant, independent contribution to children’s early reading ability (for both letters and words/non-words) after controlling for variation in receptive vocabulary, nonverbal cognitive ability, and a range of demographic variables (including gender, degree of hearing loss, communication mode, type of sensory device, age at fitting of sensory devices, and level of maternal education). Importantly, the relationship between PA and reading was specific to reading and did not generalize to another academic ability, math reasoning. Additional multiple regressions showed that letter knowledge (names or sounds) was superior in children whose mothers had undertaken post-secondary education, and that better receptive vocabulary was associated with less severe hearing loss, use of a cochlear implant, and earlier age at implant switch-on. Earlier fitting of hearing aids or cochlear implants was not, however, significantly associated with better PA or reading outcomes in this cohort of children, most of whom were fitted with sensory devices before 3 years of age.
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Keyword:
Article
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URL: https://doi.org/10.1002/rrq.60 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3929591 http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24563553
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Impact of the presence of auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD) on outcomes of children at three years of age
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A Randomized controlled comparison of NAL and DSL prescriptions for young children : hearing-aid characteristics and performance outcomes at three years of age
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A Randomized controlled trial of nonlinear frequency compression versus conventional processing in hearing aids : speech and language of children at three years of age
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Outcomes of early- and late-identified children at 3 years of age : findings from a prospective population-based study
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Language development and everyday functioning of children with hearing loss assessed at 3 years of age
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Early language outcomes of children with cochlear implants: Interim findings of the NAL study on longitudinal outcomes of children with hearing impairment*
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