School of Teacher Education, Charles Sturt University, Bathurst, New South Wales, Australia.
School of Health Sciences, University of Iceland, Reykjavik.
Am J Speech Lang Pathol. 2019 Aug 9;28(3):964-983. doi: 10.1044/2019_AJSLP-IDLL-19-0003.
Purpose Many educators and speech-language pathologists have difficulty providing effective interventions to the growing population of d/Deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH) learners who use more than 1 language. The purpose of this review article was to identify evidence-based interventions for speech, language, and literacy used with DHH multilingual learners (DMLs), monolingual DHH learners, and hearing bilingual learners without hearing loss. Interventions used with these groups can inform the practice of professionals providing services to DMLs. Method This review article considered speech, language, and literacy interventions used with DHH and hearing bilingual learners from birth to 21 years of age. The following electronic databases were searched: Academic Search Complete/EBSCO (CINAHL, Education, ERIC), Linguistics & Language Behavior Abstracts, PsycINFO, and PubMed. Data describing article, participant, methodological, and intervention variables were extracted from studies. The methodological quality of studies was examined using the Council for Exceptional Children's (2014) standards for evidence-based practice in special education. Results A total of 144 studies were reviewed, describing over 9,370 learners aged 1.8-22.0 years. Two studies investigated DMLs, 76 investigated DHH learners, and 67 investigated hearing bilingual learners. A total of 146 different interventions were examined. Most studies reported positive effects. Only 17 studies met all quality indicators specified by the Council for Exceptional Children (2014): 7 examined DHH learners, and 10 examined hearing bilingual learners. There was insufficient evidence for any intervention to be considered an evidence-based intervention, although 6 could potentially contribute to evidence-based practice. Conclusions No evidence-based interventions for DMLs were identified. A small number of interventions examined in high-quality studies of DHH and hearing bilingual learners were identified, which may be appropriate for use with DMLs following further investigation. Supplemental Material https://doi.org/10.23641/asha.9108386.
目的
许多教育工作者和言语语言病理学家在为使用多种语言的日益增多的聋人和重听(DHH)学习者提供有效干预方面存在困难。本文旨在确定用于 DHH 多语学习者(DML)、单语 DHH 学习者和无听力损失的听力双语学习者的言语、语言和读写能力的循证干预措施。这些群体中使用的干预措施可以为为 DML 提供服务的专业人员提供实践依据。
方法
本文综述了从出生到 21 岁的 DHH 和听力双语学习者使用的言语、语言和读写能力干预措施。检索了以下电子数据库:学术搜索综合版/ EBSCO(CINAHL、教育、ERIC)、语言学和语言行为文摘、PsycINFO 和 PubMed。从研究中提取了描述文章、参与者、方法学和干预变量的数据。使用特殊教育中的循证实践的特殊教育卓越儿童理事会(2014 年)标准检查研究的方法质量。
结果
共审查了 144 项研究,描述了 1.8-22.0 岁的 9370 多名学习者。两项研究调查了 DML,76 项研究调查了 DHH 学习者,67 项研究调查了听力双语学习者。共检查了 146 种不同的干预措施。大多数研究报告了积极的效果。只有 17 项研究符合特殊教育卓越儿童理事会(2014 年)规定的所有质量指标:7 项研究调查了 DHH 学习者,10 项研究调查了听力双语学习者。没有任何干预措施被认为是循证干预措施的证据,但 6 种干预措施可能有助于循证实践。
结论
没有为 DML 确定循证干预措施。在高质量的 DHH 和听力双语学习者研究中,确定了一些干预措施,在进一步研究后,这些干预措施可能适用于 DML 的使用。