Cued Speech and the Deaf Child
in the Hearing Family
A Position Statement of the National Cued Speech Association
Available
in PDF
The National Cued Speech Association (NCSA) believes parents are
the best language models for children. Approximately 90 percent
of children who are deaf or hard of hearing are born to hearing
parents. In order for the child who is deaf or hard of hearing to
be fully included in the family, s/he must have full access to the
parents’ primary language(s).
The NCSA believes that parents who consistently use a cued language
provide the child who is deaf or hard of hearing with full access
to communication and language(s) in the home, and therefore, full
inclusion in family activities.
Cueing enables hearing parents to quickly learn to express their
native language visually and then build upon their child’s
language base at home. As with all children, those who are deaf
or hard of hearing want and need to be full participants in their
family’s language(s) and culture(s). Cued Speech was developed
for use by all parents, hearing and deaf, of children who are deaf
and hard of hearing to expedite the development of English language
skills. These skills are needed to establish a strong foundation
for academic literacy.
Children of hearing parents should also be provided with opportunities
for interacting with deaf role models who use varied modes of communication.
The exposure of role models who are deaf and hard of hearing is
crucial to not only a child’s potential success, but also
his/her well-being and self-esteem.
The NCSA asserts that parents have the right to decide the mode
of communication used to convey their own language(s) and culture(s)
to their children. Parents also have the right to use Cued Speech,
singly or in combination with other modes of communication. As parents
are the most important factor in a child’s nurturing as well
as in their language development, the parents’ choices need
to be respected. The freedom to make informed choices is essential,
and educational professionals, other parents, and deaf and hard
of hearing people need to recognize and respect those choices.
The NCSA also asserts that parents have the responsibility of following
through on their commitment to Cued Speech by cueing accurately
and consistently as a family in all interactions with their child.
Parents also have a responsibility to ensure that family members
who are deaf or hard of hearing have access to communication during
any activity or gathering.
—Original Statement adopted 11-4-1990
—Revised Statement adopted 4-14 -2007
More Positions
The
NCSA Position Statements are available in PDF Format.
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