Guest guest Posted August 5, 2004 Report Share Posted August 5, 2004 Hi Sanjay, with AV there are two basic components. One is the actual therapy time, about an hour per day. This is really easy to do while working, as long as you have the time to go to the AV sessions which are usually during working hours. The beauty of AV is that it is FUN! What it amounts to is spending a total of an hour or so (can be chopped up into shorter sessions) every day " playing " with your child. I've known parents who did this before work in the morning or in the evening one parent would " play " while the other would cook and clean up etc. This is the " quality " time. The other component is the quantity time - making every part of every day a language learning experience. I always called it " Pump in the language. " According to Carol Flexer, 90% of what kids learn is via overhearing. And kids with hearing loss and hearing aids can't overhear. So their language input is diminished. So your job in AV is to try to make up for this 90% that they miss. So it is extremely important that they be in an environment during the day where they are able to hear - within earshot, and getting high quality lanugage input. This isn't just true for AV, if your child were learning ASL or any other language they would need to be immersed in that language for most of every day. This is where you really have to make the hard decisions. Because you have a window of only a few short years to make a huge difference in your child's life. And the time you spend up front will pay dividends into the future! I'd suggest you read Carol Flexer's book, Facilitating Hearing and Listening in Young Children. She is an AV guru and you will gain an understanding of the issues involved much better than I can explain. Back to working, it really depends on your child care arrangements. If you have a daycare center with 20 kids in a room with a hard surface floor, the child with HA won't get much language exposure. If you have a home day care with other children (3 or 4 not 15!) and lots of , it can be a great source of language. If they spend hours with the TV or videos on, the child with HA won't pick up much language. Turns out " canned " language is not the same as lanugage attached to meaningful social interaction when it comes to kids learning language. I decided to stay home when my third child was born, but her hearing loss wasn't discovered until she was almost 4. So I stayed out another few years until she was in real school. And we did kindergarten twice. Every child is different, every family is different. So if one of you wants to stay home, and you can manage for a few years financially, it could quite possibly benefit your child. Let us know how it all works out. That's the beauty of this list, no one tells you what you SHOULD do, but we all share what has worked for us and hopefully you'll find what works for you and share it with the next parents to come along. in GA Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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