Teacher
Overcomes Late Start in English by Focusing on the Solution
By Barbara Brite Lee
When presented with a challenge - three new 7-year-old profoundly
deaf students who were seriously language delayed - Julie Russell,
a 26-year veteran teacher of the deaf, looked beyond the problem
and focused on a long term solution, a solution that included using
Cued Speech.
In the summer of 2000, Julie was assigned to create a self-contained
elementary class for the children. Although all three students had
apparently normal intelligence, two students had cochlear implants
that had been in use for less than six months; two were from homes
where the spoken language was Spanish, two had previously been taught
using ASL and one did not vocalize at all. Two of the students had
attended the school for the deaf; one had attended a preschool.
Julie was a respected teacher, known for her expertise in and passion
for language instruction. Over the years Julie had honed her skills,
became a proficient signer, learned Cued Speech, learned Auditory-Verbal
strategies, developed original teaching materials for herself and
others, and had watched her students excel through high school into
college. Julie had also learned Cued Speech from her colleague,
speech language pathologist Karen Parrish, when they both worked
with a student who used CS. The student had succeeded taking advanced
placement classes in high school and is now attending the University
of North Carolina—Chapel Hill.
Anticipating her new students, the two teachers conferred and agreed
that
- the immediate priority was language development based on spoken
language;
- signing could not efficiently facilitate that goal; and
- the two students with new cochlear implants were so delayed
that it was unreasonable to spend a year devoted entirely to Auditory
Verbal strategies for learning to listen.
Karen and Julie agreed that using Cued Speech was the surest road
to literacy so they began cueing to the students and teaching them
to cue expressively. They agreed that Julie would work on language
and the designated speech-language pathologist would focus on speech
and learning to listen.
Julie administered language assessments to establish baseline data
on each student (see table below). In every aspect of language,
each child was 4 to 5 years delayed. Julie based on her experience
teaching with Cued Speech, set a goal: the children would learn
language to age appropriate levels.
Language Assessment
| Peabody Picture Vocabulary (PPV) |
All scored below the lowest level of the norms (2.6) |
| Test of Auditory Comprehension of Language (TACL) |
All scored at the three year old level. |
| Expressive Vocabulary Test (EVT) |
Two scored below the lowest level of the norms (2.0)
One scored an age equivalency of 2 years, 4 months. |
| Sentence Elicitation Test (SET) |
Most of the students’ signed responses were simple labels,
with the highest level being two-sign utterances. |
THE FIRST SCHOOL YEAR 2000-01
The first year was not easy; the transition from ASL to Cued Speech
presented formidable challenges. For Cued Speech to really accelerate
language learning, the parents also needed to cue. The children’s
parents were given information about Cued Speech and offered the
opportunity to learn to cue. The English speaking mother and one
of the Hispanic parents learned to cue. The child from the third
family only received cues receptively at school.
Julie worked with the students on language development in a self-contained
classroom from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m., cueing all lessons and using
sign when communication failed. She focused on teaching them language
as well as receptive and expressive use of Cued Speech.
“Everything revolved around developing language using meaningful
experiences,” said Julie. Vocabulary developed so that the
students could produce basic sentence patterns, followed by the
use of basic conjunctions like “and,” “but,”
and “because,” and then by more complex sentences.
Kindergarten teachers will tell you that the first thing kindergartners
need to learn for literacy is the sounds of the letters. Knowing
this, Julie selected Explode the Code, a phonics program, and began
teaching the children to cue-and-say the sounds of the phonemes.
The cues gave the children an exact representation of the phonemes
they were learning. The second step in a typical phonics program
is the blending of three-phoneme words, digraphs, and diphthongs,
again easily expressed with Cued Speech. Using this strategy, the
students not only learned to cue; they learned to associate the
cues with the sounds of printed letters and to decode the cues when
Julie cued to them.
Finding appropriate reading material was a challenge. After lengthy
discussions with a Reading Recovery teacher, Julie elected to use
the Rigby and Wright Reading Series because they provided a wealth
of language appropriate reading materials in small, colorful, attractive
books.
Mainstreaming without a sufficient language foundation is usually
a nonproductive experience for deaf students. However, after spending
the first part of each day with Julie, the three students were mainstreamed
into a first grade math class, their first exposure to regular education
– with a Cued Speech language facilitator/transliterator.
The goals were to give them exposure to a regular classroom environment,
to the math concepts, and to develop sufficient language for taking
the state mandated End of Grade math test when they got to third
grade.
Other significant challenges that first year were that there were
personnel who were philosophically opposed to the program; there
was no experienced professional to provide guidance; and there was
uncertainty about the role of the language facilitators/transliterators.
The language facilitator/transliterator role was defined as to transliterate
and also to do additional things that he or she deemed appropriate
to facilitate the student's language learning (i.e. rephrase, remind
the student of something he had learned from Ms. Russell, repeat,
etc).
“I had a vision but the path taken was not always straight
and smooth. We had to take detours, backtrack and sidetrack, but
we never forgot our goal and always moved toward it,” Julie
recalled.
THE SECOND SCHOOL YEAR 2001-02
There were major changes this year. The program moved to a different
elementary school and the role of the language facilitators was
dramatically expanded from transliteration to one of total involvement
in developing language in their assigned student, becoming full-fledged
members of the educational team.
“Through daily observation of my teaching language lessons,
the facilitators learned to input, practice and elicit specific
language structures,” said Julie. In order to track language
usage in a variety of situations, the facilitators were trained
to document spontaneous language, writing it precisely in notebooks
that they carried everywhere. Julie used the notebooks to check
progress toward the IEP goals, measured by the length and complexity
of their utterances For example, “The boy can’t under
the ball” became “The boy can’t get the ball because
the ball is under the car.” Such progress was exhilarating
to everyone involved.
Julie continued to work with the phonics and reading programs.
Due to the students’ language delay, mainstreaming continued
only for second grade math.
“I did not use mainstreaming as a dumping ground. I wanted
it to be a meaningful learning experience,” Julie stated.
Julie also implemented a positive reinforcement system to encourage
the students to use the language they had learned throughout the
day. Initially, the children were content to use 2-3 word utterances.
Then Julie gave the students a card with 20 circles that they wore
around their necks. Every time a good sentence was used, the students
were praised and a circle was punched. They were “paid”
with a dollar of play money when each card was completed. At the
end of the week, they could buy goodies at a store established in
the classroom.
“The kids were almost clamoring to give good sentences whenever
opportunities arose, and we were frantically trying to replenish
the items in the store,” Julie said. “The students began
talking more — and wanted to talk even more.”
THE THIRD SCHOOL YEAR 2002-03
Language continued to be the primary focus in the third year. There
was an increased emphasis on math in preparation for the End of
Grade third grade math test.
“To insure success, I implemented a consistent plan for pre-teaching
and reviewing math vocabulary and skills,” said Julie. “The
facilitators were responsible for monitoring this facet of the program;
they alerted me to language issues that arose and I worked on those
accordingly.”
The students had developed enough language that they were ready
to use the Scott Foresman reading series adopted by the county for
regular education students. Assessments at the beginning of the
year indicated that two students were at the primer level and one
was at the pre-primer level. The difficulties were not in vocabulary
or word recognition, but in retelling and recalling details. Julie
had one-on-one reading sessions with each student for an hour a
day, and shifted the emphasis to comprehension through retelling
and recalling details.
On the End-of-Grade testing in math, both third graders scored
a 4 — the highest score obtainable. The test was language
intensive, including many word problems. The excellent scores and
the fact that the students were able to read the problems for themselves
was cause for celebration by everyone who helped make it happen.
Jubilation reigned both at home and school ! ! ! !
At the end of the year, the test scores showed one student at the
third grade instructional/ independent level, one at the 2nd grade
independent level and the 3rd grade instructional level, and one
at the 2nd grade instructional level.
Test Scores
| Student |
CA* |
PPVT |
EVT |
TACL |
| A |
10.7 |
7.1 |
8.6 |
8.2 |
| B |
9.9 |
6.6 |
8.8 |
6.11 |
| C |
9.10 |
7.3 |
8.11 |
8.4 |
* Chronological Age
THE FOURTH SCHOOL YEAR 2003-04
Success! This year one student is mainstreamed for reading; all
three are mainstreamed for math and writing.
“We don’t mainstream without support. We give them
whatever they need in pre-teaching and review to enable them to
function successfully in the mainstream. The goal is for them to
be able to be assessed with modifications addressing only their
hearing loss and communication, not their ability to read and understand,”
Julie stressed.
REFLECT AND REVIEW
When I asked Julie what she had learned as a teacher, these were
some of the things she noted.
- The importance of a long range vision - “Without this,
it would be like taking a journey without a destination.”
Stephen Covey (author of the best selling Seven Habits of Highly
Effective People would certainly agree. One of his habits is,
“Begin with the end in mind.”
- The necessity to raise expectations - “It was not enough
to make just a year’s progress in a year’s time. If
that was all we did, the students would never have language skills
on their chronological age level. They had to make more than a
year’s progress in a year’s time in order to close
the gap.”
- Everyone involved with the child needs to be, in some way, accountable
for his progress. - “IEP goals need to be taken seriously.
Teachers, parents, speech therapists, language facilitators/ transliterators
each have a very important role to play individually and collectively.
We all need to be aware of the student’s goals and support
each other in achieving them. Parents were asked to do specific
things and report back to me. Language facilitators/ transliterators
had specific assignments each week and I checked the students’
progress on Friday. The speech therapist kept the rest of us informed
about speech goals and strategies for helping the students reach
them.”
- Educators and parents may have to leave their comfort zone
and try something new to maximize achievement - “If you
always do what you’ve done, you will always get what you’ve
always got.” Julie reminded me that she had first heard
that oft-quoted statement from me during a workshop. I heard it
from a former student teacher, who heard it at a school for the
deaf in Australia. It’s been around for a long time and
is still true.
If Julie could change anything about the strategies she used, “I
would have implemented the expanded use of the facilitators from
the very start. I have always believed that knowledge of the student’s
language is a crucial element for effective communication / facilitation
in the mainstream. When facilitators become completely involved
in developing the child’s language, facilitation is no longer
a guessing game. They are no longer wondering if information needs
to be rephrased. They are able to assist the student in applying
the language he has learned in the resource room to the mainstream
setting so that there is no question that the work the student turns
in is his own words, not anyone else’s.”
“Training the facilitators to be language developers requires
a lot of hard work, but knowing the benefit it reaps, I’d
have it no other way. I needed the facilitators to utilize the time
effectively when the students were not with me and to reinforce
the language structures I was teaching.” Julie emphasized
repeatedly that the students would not have made the progress they
did without facilitators Beverly Mahoney (mother of a Cued Speech
kid) and Linda Nelson.
Julie Russell and the entire staff at her school have walked the
walk toward the solution. Julie did not shy away from the challenge
because of fear or conformity or laziness. Her fellow teachers respect
and admire what she has accomplished. There were many factors that
contributed to the success of these students, but the bottom line
is that Julie focused on the solution.
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