EARLY HEARING DETECTION AND INTERVENTION VIRTUAL CONFERENCE
MARCH 2-5, 2021
(Virtually the same conference, without elevators, airplane tickets, or hotel room keys)
4/15/2014 | 2:15 PM - 2:45 PM | Early Language: A Bridge to Emotional and Cognitive Well-Being | Daytona | 3
Early Language: A Bridge to Emotional and Cognitive Well-Being
This session will address the importance of assessing, monitoring, and building social language skills and a repertoire of 'emotional vocabulary' to help deaf and hard of hearing children to thrive. Research suggests that children with hearing loss can attain receptive and expressive language skills that are on par with their hearing peers when the appropriate supports and intervention are put into place in a timely manner. However, research also indicates that these children remain at-risk for difficulties with pragmatics/social language, as well as for behavior problems and social isolation, when their needs are not met. We will highlight the importance of building language and communication skills, in the broadest sense, as a means of promoting social-emotional development. As psychologists, we believe this is vitally important. This session, which is aimed at parents as well as professionals, will highlight how you can learn to go beyond building receptive and expressive language skills and incorporate other important aspects of communication in order to help foster each child's overall development.
- 1. Describe the limitations of focusing only on receptive and expressive language skills in children who are deaf or hard of hearing.
- 2. Explain why the incorporation of pragmatics and social skill development is important for children with hearing loss.
- 3. Describe a minimum of two strategies that can be incorporated into one's own professional work or one's parenting "tool bag" that can help to address the social-emotional needs of the children who are deaf or hard of hearing.
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Presenters/Authors
Amy Szarkowski
(Primary Presenter), Children's Center for Communication/Beverly School for the Deaf, Amy.Szarkowski@childrens.harvard.edu;
Amy Szarkowski, PhD, is the Director of The Institute and The Clinic at the Children's Center for Communication/ Beverly School for the Deaf (CCCBSD), and faculty for LEND (Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental and related Disabilities), at Boston Children's Hospital. Dr. Szarkowski holds an academic appointment as Assistant Professor in the Department of Psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. She is also an adjunct instructor for the Infants, Toddlers and Families (ITF) Interdisciplinary program at Gallaudet University.
ASHA DISCLOSURE:
Financial -
No relevant financial relationship exist.
Nonfinancial -
• Has a Professional (Research Committee Co-Chair)
relationship for Volunteer membership on advisory committee or review panels.
• Has a Professional (Advisory Board)
relationship for Volunteer membership on advisory committee or review panels.
Jill Grenon
(Co-Presenter), The Learning Center for the Deaf, Jill_Grenon@tlcdeaf.org;
Jill Grenon MA, CAGS, NCSP, is a School Psychologist at the Learning Center for the Deaf in Framingham, MA. She received a BA from the University of Rhode Island in Communication Studies with a concentration in Speech Pathology and Audiology. She also holds a Master's degree in Developmental Psychology and a CAGS in School Psychology with a Specialization in Deafness from Gallaudet College. Jill has worked in schools for the Deaf with children from birth to age 22 over the course of the last 30 years. Her work includes assessing the cognitive, linguistic, and emotional functioning of children of all ages, in addition to family and staff consultation. Jill’s work within a bilingual/bicultural school focuses on the commitment of TLC to give all deaf and hard-of-hearing children the earliest possible access to language by creating language-rich learning environments geared towards each child’s communication modality.
ASHA DISCLOSURE:
Financial -
Nonfinancial -