Sarah’s Brave Words Book
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Sunday, May 31, 2026
Friday, May 1, 2026
Strategies to Encourage Independence and Chores at Home
Social Story: I Listen Hard at School, and I Help at Home
* My name is _________________. I am ______years old.
* I go to school every day, and I listen a lot with my
cochlear implant. My ears work very hard all day. Sometimes after school, I
feel tired.
That is okay.
* When I get home, I can take a short rest and have a snack.
This helps me feel better.
* After my short rest, it is time to help my family.
Everyone in our house helps. Helping makes our home nice and makes me
feel strong and proud.
I can do many things by myself!
I CAN: • Put my backpack and lunchbox away • Set the
table and clear my plate • Put my dirty clothes in the hamper.
Sometimes I feel tired and say, “Can you do
it for me?” When I say that, one of the ladies at home must do my job
instead of me. That is not fair to them.
I can use my good words instead. I
can say: “I listened hard today and I feel tired. I need a short break. Then I
will help.”
When I help my family, everyone feels happy.
I feel happy too because I am being responsible.
I am a good listener at school. I am a helpful boy at home.
I am proud of myself!
Social Story: I Can Do It Myself – I Am Getting Stronger
* My name is _______________.
I live with three nice ladies who
love me very much. They take good care of me.
* Sometimes I ask them to do things for me
even when I can do them myself. I say I am too tired.
* School makes my ears work hard with my
cochlear implant. It is okay to feel tired. But I am 8 years old and I
can do many things by myself.
* My jobs at home
are important.
When I do my jobs, I help the whole
family. It makes me feel grown-up and strong.
* After school I can:
- Take a short rest and snack
(about 10–15 minutes)
- Do my jobs
- Then have free time to play
*If I feel tired, I can say, “I need a short break first. Then I will
do my job.”
* I am petite, but I
am strong inside. I can do hard things. I am learning to be more independent
every day. I am proud when I help my family!
_______________’s After-School Routine
- Get home – Take off my shoes and put my
backpack in its place.
- Short rest – Have a snack and rest quietly
for 10–15 minutes.
- My jobs – Help my family:
- Put my backpack and lunchbox
away
- Set the table or clear my plate
after eating
- Put my dirty clothes in the
hamper
- Check my cochlear implant – Make sure it is working well.
- Free time – Play, read, or do something
fun after my jobs are done.
✓ Check off each step when finished!
Helpful Words I Can Say
- “I need a short break because my
ears worked hard today.”
- “I will do it after my rest.”
- “I can try it myself.”
Daily Helper Jobs
Checklist
_________________’s Helper Jobs Today’s Date: ___________________
- Put my backpack and lunchbox away
- Help set or clear the table
- Put my dirty clothes in the
hamper
- One more job:
________________________
When I finish all my jobs, I feel proud! Great job, _________________!
Sunday, April 19, 2026
Dynamic AAC Devices for Children with Late Intervention - After the Critical Language Period)
Cochlear Implants, BAHA/Bone Conduction Devices, and Traditional Hearing Aids – with ELL/Bilingual Considerations
The critical language period (roughly birth to age 3–3.5 years) is
when the brain is most plastic for developing auditory-based spoken language.
Intervention after this window increases the risk of gaps in vocabulary,
grammar, and functional communication — but the degree of risk and the
potential benefit of dynamic AAC varies significantly by device type.
Side-by-Side Analysis: CI vs. BAHA vs.
Hearing Aids (Late Intervention)
|
Aspect |
Cochlear Implants (CI) |
BAHA / Bone Conduction Devices |
Traditional Hearing Aids (HA) |
|
Type of hearing loss |
Severe-to-profound sensorineural
(cochlea/nerve damaged) |
Conductive, mixed, or single-sided
deafness (cochlea intact) |
Mild-to-severe sensorineural or
conductive |
|
How sound is delivered |
Electrical stimulation directly to
auditory nerve |
Vibration through bone to intact
cochlea (more “natural” sound) |
Acoustic amplification through ear
canal |
|
Impact of late surgery/fitting |
Highest risk of language delays
(missed peak plasticity window) |
Lower risk — cochlea is healthy;
early non-surgical options (Softband) can minimize gaps |
Moderate risk; delays possible but
often milder than late CI |
|
Typical language outcomes |
Slower vocabulary/grammar growth if
implanted >3 yrs; more variable results |
Stronger spoken-language potential
with consistent use; often closer to typical peers |
Good progress possible; bilingual
users may wear devices fewer hours |
|
Need for dynamic AAC |
Most common / strongest
recommendation as supplement |
Situational only (not routine) |
Situational only (least common) |
|
When AAC is most helpful |
Persistent vocabulary/grammar gaps,
frustration, additional disabilities, or ELL |
Additional disabilities, very slow
progress, or low device wear time in bilingual families |
Additional disabilities,
inconsistent device use, or ELL-related delays |
|
ELL/Bilingual considerations |
High benefit from bilingual AAC
features (code-switching) |
Moderate benefit; bilingual families
sometimes show lower daily wear time |
Highest risk of lower daily wear
time in bilingual families (2024 study) |
Key research insights (specific to late intervention + ELL):
- Late CI children show the largest
gaps and benefit most from multimodal supports like AAC.
- BAHA in children with conductive
loss generally supports better speech/language development than
conventional aids, with less severe impact from delayed intervention.
- Bilingual children with
traditional hearing aids wear devices significantly fewer hours per day
than monolingual peers (especially older children); this difference is not
seen with CI or bone-conduction devices.
- AAC (including dynamic apps) does
not hinder spoken language in any device group — it often increases
speech attempts and functional communication.
Is Dynamic AAC Recommend? If Yes, How
and What Type?
General rule: Dynamic AAC (high-tech speech-generating apps on a tablet) is a supplement
— never a replacement for auditory training, spoken-language modeling, or
device optimization. It provides visual symbols + clear voice output
that pairs with whatever hearing technology the child uses.
1. Cochlear Implants (CI) – Late Implantation
Yes — It is recommended that dynamic AAC be used here most strongly. Late implantation often results in
larger gaps due to auditory deprivation during the critical period. Dynamic AAC
bridges those gaps by giving consistent visual + auditory models while the
child continues listening/spoken practice. Recommended apps (in order of
preference for your ELL families):
- Proloquo2Go (top choice) — strongest grammar
tools + true bilingual code-switching (English/Spanish mid-sentence).
- TouchChat (with WordPower) — excellent
sentence flow and Android option.
- LAMP Words for Life — great for motor planning and
automaticity.
Used in short, functional sessions (play, routines, story retell) with
immediate spoken modeling.
2. BAHA / Bone Conduction Devices
Only on a case-by-case basis — not routinely. Because the cochlea is intact, sound
quality is more natural and language delays are usually milder. AAC is helpful only
if:
- The child has additional
disabilities or very slow spoken-language progress despite good BAHA
fitting.
- Bilingual families show lower
daily device wear time (as noted in recent data).
- Frustration or communication
breakdowns persist in noisy classrooms.
Same three apps as above; emphasize fading visual support quickly as
auditory access is typically stronger.
3. Traditional Hearing Aids
Only on a case-by-case basis — least often needed. Acoustic amplification is usually
sufficient for many children when consistently fitted. AAC is considered when:
- Spoken-language progress is
slower than expected.
- Bilingual children show reduced
daily wear time (a documented pattern).
- There are co-occurring challenges
(e.g., motor speech issues, ELL academic vocabulary gaps).
Again, the same dynamic apps work well, with extra attention to ensuring
consistent HA use alongside AAC.
Special Considerations for Bilingual/ELL
Families
- Device wear time: Bilingual children with hearing
aids are at higher risk of wearing devices fewer hours daily. BAHA and CI
users do not show this difference. AAC can help by making communication
more motivating and reducing reliance on perfect device conditions.
- Bilingual support: Proloquo2Go stands out for
seamless English - Spanish code-switching and dual-language pages —
critical for honoring home language while building school English.
- Cultural & family buy-in: AAC reduces frustration for
both child and family, which can improve overall device adherence in
bilingual households.
- No risk to spoken language: Multiple studies confirm AAC
supports (and often accelerates) spoken attempts in DHH children across
all device types.
Bottom line for speech practice:
- CI (late) → Dynamic AAC is frequently
recommended as a powerful supplement.
- BAHA or traditional HA → Dynamic AAC is situational and
used only when spoken-language progress lags or additional factors
(including ELL-related wear-time issues) are present.
- In all cases, start with a full
AAC evaluation by an SLP experienced in both hearing technology and
bilingual development. Trial the apps, monitor spoken-language gains, and
fade support as the child’s auditory access and skills improve.
This approach is evidence-based, family-centered, and tailored to the
diverse caseload you serve.
Saturday, April 18, 2026
Auditory-Oral (A/O) Approach For School-Age Children
For school-age children (roughly ages 5–12) who spend most of their weekdays in regular or mainstream classrooms with teachers and hearing peers, and whose parents have limited daily involvement (“rare guests” during the school week), the Auditory-Oral (A/O) Approach is generally the more practical and effective choice.
Why Auditory-Oral Is
Usually Better in This Situation
|
Factor |
Auditory-Oral (A/O) |
Auditory-Verbal (AVT) |
Why It Matters for School-Age Kids with Limited Parent Time |
|
Primary learning environment |
Classroom/group setting with natural
visual supports (lip-reading, gestures, facial expressions, board work,
teacher cues) |
One-on-one or parent-coached
sessions emphasizing listening only (visual cues minimized) |
Most of the child’s day is now in a
noisy, multi-speaker classroom where visuals are naturally present and
helpful. |
|
How it handles real classrooms |
Uses speechreading + contextual cues
+ hearing technology to understand teachers and peers in group settings |
Trains the child to rely almost
exclusively on listening; visuals are deliberately reduced |
Classrooms are rarely
“auditory-only.” Teachers move around, write on boards, and use gestures. A/O
builds skills that match the actual environment. |
|
Role of parents |
Important but not the main
“teacher”; school staff and therapists drive most of the work |
Parents are the primary language
teachers and must do daily coaching at home |
When parents can only be “rare
guests,” AVT’s core strength (intensive parent-led practice) is harder to
deliver consistently. |
|
Flexibility for school-age |
Designed for group/classroom
programs; easily integrated into mainstream or special education |
Can continue into school age, but
often shifts away from constant parent presence |
Research notes that for older
children, AVT sessions may happen without parents in the room, but the
approach still assumes strong home reinforcement. |
Key reasons A/O fits this scenario better:
- The bulk of language learning now
happens at school, not at home. A/O directly prepares children for
the real-world classroom by teaching them to combine listening with the
natural visual cues they will encounter every day (e.g., watching the
teacher’s face while she writes on the board, or following a group
discussion).
- Classrooms are noisy and visually
busy. Pure auditory-only practice (AVT) is excellent when it can be done
consistently, but it’s challenging to maintain all day in a typical school
setting without specially trained staff using AVT strategies 100% of the
time.
- AVT is a family-centered,
parent-coaching model. Studies repeatedly note that it requires
substantial family commitment and daily home practice. When parents have
limited time or presence during the week, this model loses much of its
power.
- A/O can still be delivered
effectively by school-based therapists, teachers of the deaf, or SLPs who
work directly with the child in the classroom or pull-out sessions. It
does not depend as heavily on parents being the main teachers.
That said, AVT still produces strong overall outcomes when families can
commit fully. But in the specific situation — school-age child + heavy
classroom time + limited parent availability — A/O is the more realistic and
supportive fit. Many programs today use a flexible “listening and spoken
language” (LSL) approach that leans toward A/O strategies in school while still
encouraging strong auditory focus.
Practical Advice for Parents:
How to Support at Home (Even with
Limited Time)
Even if you can only give 15–30 minutes a day or a focused block on
weekends, your involvement still makes a big difference. Focus on quality
over quantity and make it part of normal routines rather than extra
“therapy time.” Here’s what works best with the Auditory-Oral approach:
- Create a good listening
environment (5 – 10 minutes a day)
- Sit face-to-face in a quiet room
with the TV/radio off and good lighting on your face.
- Use the child’s hearing
technology consistently (check batteries, keep the FM/DM system charged
if they have one).
- Speak at a normal pace and
volume — don’t shout.
- Use natural visuals the same way
the classroom does
- Let your child watch your face
and lips while you talk (this matches A/O training).
- Point to objects or pictures
only when needed — then fade the gesture so they learn to listen first.
- Repeat what your child says and
expand it slightly: “You want milk? Yes, let’s get the milk from the
fridge.”
- Embed language in everyday
routines (no extra time needed)
- Narrate what you’re doing while
cooking, driving, or getting ready: “First we put on socks… now shoes…
we’re walking to the car.”
- Read aloud every night (even 10
minutes). Choose books with rich vocabulary and talk about the pictures.
- Play simple listening games: “I
spy something red that makes a sound” or “Simon says…” while facing each
other.
- Stay connected with the school
team (biggest impact, least daily time)
- Ask for a quick weekly summary
from the teacher or SLP: “What new words or concepts is the class working
on?” Then use those same words at home.
- Request that the school share
the child’s IEP goals or current vocabulary lists.
- Attend parent-teacher
conferences or IEP meetings — even if you can’t be there every day, your
input matters.
- Weekend or evening “boost”
activities (once or twice a week)
- 20 – 30 minutes of one-on-one
play or reading where you deliberately use the same strategies the school
is using.
- Watch short videos or shows
together with captions on, then talk about what happened (combines
listening + visual support).
- Practice “classroom-like”
situations: pretend you’re the teacher giving instructions while the
child follows directions by listening and watching your face.
Bottom line for parents: Your child’s school is now their main “language classroom.” The
Auditory-Oral approach works with that reality instead of fighting it. Your
role at home is to reinforce, not to carry the full load. Consistent, short,
high-quality interactions still give your child a huge advantage. Many families
in exactly your situation see excellent progress when school and home work
together this way.
If the child already has very strong listening skills and the family can
commit to more structured home practice on weekends, some elements of AVT can
be layered in later. Talk with your child’s SLP or the school team about what
best matches your family’s schedule — they can help blend the approaches.