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引用次数: 0
摘要
研究目的本研究旨在调查加拿大学龄聋人中植入人工耳蜗(CI)者的阅读成果。目的是调查他们的成绩是否接近健听年龄的同龄人,并确定影响成绩的人口学因素:参与者是从加拿大中部一个大型教育局的 70 名四年级至十二年级接受全纳教育的聋哑学生的较大样本中选出的 13 名带有 CI 的学生。数据来源包括人口统计学信息、教师对听觉表现分类(CAP)的评分以及伍德考克-约翰逊III诊断性阅读测验[WJ III-DRB]的得分:除了语音意识(Phonological Awareness)处于较低水平外,学员在所有领域的平均成绩都在较低水平;但是,学员之间的分数差异很大。人口统计学变量(如家庭语言、额外残疾)均与成绩无显著关联,尽管年龄较大的学生在语音认知方面的平均分较高:这些研究结果丰富了有关识字成绩和人工耳蜗植入的研究,证明这项技术对迄今为止在这一领域表现不佳的人群有显著的积极影响。
Reading achievement and deaf students with cochlear implants.
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to investigate the reading outcomes of a Canadian cohort of school-aged deaf learners with cochlear implants (CIs). The goal was to investigate whether achievement approached that of hearing age peers and identify demographic factors influencing performance.
Methods: Participants represent a subset of 13 students with CIs from a larger sample of 70 deaf students in grades four through 12 educated in inclusive settings within a large school board in central Canada. Data sources included demographic information, teachers' ratings on the Categories of Auditory Performance (CAP), and scores from the Woodcock-Johnson III Diagnostic Reading Battery [WJ III-DRB].Results/Discussion: Participants performed within the low average range in all areas except for Phonological Awareness, which was in the low range; however, there was wide variability in scores across participants. None of the demographic variables (e.g. home language, additional disabilities) had a statistically significant association with performance, although older students had higher mean scores on the Phonological Awareness cluster.
Conclusion: These findings add to the body of research on literacy achievement and cochlear implantation, providing evidence that this technology has a significant positive effect on outcomes for a population that has heretofore underperformed in this area.
期刊介绍:
Cochlear Implants International was founded as an interdisciplinary, peer-reviewed journal in response to the growing number of publications in the field of cochlear implants. It was designed to meet a need to include scientific contributions from all the disciplines that are represented in cochlear implant teams: audiology, medicine and surgery, speech therapy and speech pathology, psychology, hearing therapy, radiology, pathology, engineering and acoustics, teaching, and communication. The aim was to found a truly interdisciplinary journal, representing the full breadth of the field of cochlear implantation.