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Innovative USC program helps develop literacy for deaf and hard-of-hearing children from bilingual homes

July 26, 2016

10__GR40294.120555Three-week summer program of community outreach improves reading and writing skills with interventions for students, parents and teachers

Contact: Meg Aldrich at Meg.Aldrich@med.usc.edu or (323) 442-3941

LOS ANGELES — “Come read with me.”

Those can be some of the most powerful words in the development of any child’s ability to read and write. For children who are deaf or hard-of-hearing and living in bilingual homes, the “come read with me” invitation becomes even more crucial to their literacy development.

That’s why the USC Caruso Family Center for Childhood Communication is getting creative in tackling challenges that children with hearing loss face in learning to listen, talk, read and write. Its innovative program — called “Come Read with Me” — is an intensive three-week summer intervention and grant-funded research project designed to help develop early literacy skills in oral deaf and hard-of-hearing children from bilingual (Spanish-English) homes.

Through the program, USC seeks to support everyone involved in a child’s education — the children, their parents, and teachers of the deaf and hard-of-hearing in the greater Los Angeles area.

The program is the creation of a interdisciplinary team of experts: educational specialist Debra K. Schrader, audiologist Karen C. Johnson, speech language pathologist Dianne Hammes Ganguly, and biostatistician Laurel M. Fisher. From 2013 to present, Come Read with Me has over 50 children from ages 4.5 to 8 years, 41 parents and caregivers from homes in which Spanish is spoken by at least one parent, and 16 full-time teachers and language specialists in special education programs and private practice. The program primarily serves families and educators in Los Angeles and surrounding area.

The results are promising.

Children become active readers and writers
During the summer session, children receive daily lessons in shared reading, dialogic reading, writing and awareness of the sounds of speech. They learn concepts of print and word knowledge developed through interactions with peers, parents, and teachers.

Parents say their kids are more engaged in both reading and writing at home. After a three-week session, children demonstrate increased conversational turn-taking during reading activities and more purposeful interaction during writing activities.

Parents become change-agents
Parents receive 12 hours of group instruction on how to develop their children’s reading and writing at home. With this knowledge, they start viewing themselves as change agents who can actively help their children gain literacy skills. They share their new strategies with other parents, and many families have returned for another summer in the program.

“Parents are hungry for information and knowledge,” said Johnson, who is principal investigator of the research project and an associate professor of clinical otolaryngology at the Keck School of Medicine. “Their enthusiasm is inspiring. As one mother told us: ‘I think I get it — books are where my daughter will gain her wisdom.’”

The late chair of the USC Caruso Department of Otolaryngology-Head & Neck Surgery, John K. Niparko, MD, who championed this program from the start, had noted instances of deaf children using their new literacy skills to teach others in their family to read.

Teachers feel more prepared
Teachers report feeling more equipped to help deaf and hard-of-hearing students in the classroom. They receive five days of professional development designed to give them new strategies in teaching phonological awareness, shared reading, and writing. They also benefit from daily coaching and mentoring during the summer program.

“Teachers are taking this to the classroom and to their peers,” said Schrader. “Participants have started sharing their new knowledge with other teachers through professional development at their schools. This is such an effective way to support greater language and literacy acquisition.”

“Come Read with Me is having a ripple effect,” said Dianne Hammes Ganguly. “Children are more engaged in reading and writing activities. Parents are learning new ways to help their children become better readers and writers. And teachers are gaining additional skills in helping parents and children during this learning process. Supporting all three groups is critical to child success.”

In the words of one of the parents, Come Read with Me has made words “sparkle” for her son.

The 2016 summer session is concluding at the end of July.
ABOUT KECK MEDICINE OF USC
Keck Medicine of USC is the University of Southern California’s medical enterprise, one of only two university-based medical systems in the Los Angeles area. Encompassing academic, research and clinical excellence, the medical system attracts internationally renowned experts who teach and practice at the Keck School of Medicine of USC, the region’s first medical school; includes the renowned USC Norris Comprehensive Cancer Center, one of the first comprehensive cancer centers established by the National Institutes of Health (NIH) in the United States; has a medical faculty practice, the USC Care Medical Group; operates the Keck Medical Center of USC, which includes two acute care hospitals: 401-licensed bed Keck Hospital of USC and 60-licensed bed USC Norris Cancer Hospital; and owns USC Verdugo Hills Hospital, a 158-licensed bed community hospital. It also includes more than 40 outpatient facilities, some at affiliated hospitals, in Los Angeles, Orange, Kern, Tulare and Ventura counties.

U.S. News & World Report ranked Keck Medical Center of USC among the Top 10 in ophthalmology and among the Top 50 hospitals in the United States for urology and cancer care.

For more information, go to www.keckmedicine.org/beyond.

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Come Read With Me improves literacy and writing among hard-of-hearing, bilingual students.