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Giving language a helping hand | Cathy Rasmussen | TEDxFlourCity

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    I am a speech language pathologist
    which is a wonderful profession
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    for people like me
    who care about communication.
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    We think that communication
    is a human right.
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    The focus of my career has been
    on children who are deaf.
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    And early on, I learned
    of an innovation for access to language
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    that I want to tell you about.
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    My first job was at a preschool
    in Washington, D.C.
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    that included both
    deaf and hearing children.
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    And the first child I worked with
    there was Bradley,
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    a three year old who had
    profound hearing loss.
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    He didn't get much benefit
    from his hearing aids
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    so his parents had chosen to use
    a visual mode of communication with him
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    called Cued Speech.
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    So I began to cue with him,
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    and during that preschool year,
    we did ordinary preschool things,
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    but with the help of Cued Speech.
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    We talked and I cued
    about everything under the sun,
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    and Bradley's language took off.
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    We read and I cued dozens of books.
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    And he learned to read.
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    He went on to great language
    and communication skills.
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    Academic achievement.
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    What was the key?
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    I will forgive you if you think
    I was the world's best speech therapist.
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    But that wasn't it.
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    The real key was we had
    a powerful tool in our hands.
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    We had Cued Speech. Cued Speech.
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    What is it? What am I doing?
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    We all use our eyes sometimes
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    when we're trying
    to hear a spoken message.
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    But lipreading is really difficult.
    Speech happens fast.
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    Speech sounds look alike
    when they are invisible.
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    With lipreading alone,
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    we understand only about
    one-third of a spoken message.
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    To overcome this,
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    Cued Speech was developed
    by Dr. Orin Cornett
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    at Gallaudet University in the mid 1960s.
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    He wanted to enable
    hearing parents with deaf children
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    to share spoken language.
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    His idea was a set of hand cues
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    that would add information
    to the natural lip movements of speech
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    to take the guesswork out of lipreading.
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    How does it work?
    It's a very simple system.
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    Hand shapes show consonants.
    Placements show vowels.
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    Cues along with the lip movements
    of speech show the sounds we're saying,
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    and allow a deaf person
    to understand 100% of what is said.
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    Let me give you an example.
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    Let's think about
    the words 'bat' and 'pat'.
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    If you are lipreading them,
    you can't tell them apart.
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    They look alike.
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    But if we add cues,
    we make them look different.
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    Bat. Pat.
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    You can even understand it without voice:
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    (voiceless) Bat. Pat.
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    If you have some hearing,
    cues can be a supplement.
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    But spoken language
    can be understood entirely
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    through vision if that's the need.
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    Here's the chart that shows
    the whole system on one page,
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    hand shapes and consonants.
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    For adults to learn to cue,
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    it's simply a matter of matching up
    the sounds you know
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    with the hand shapes and the placements.
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    Others can learn and understand
    language by being cued to.
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    What can we cue?
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    Anything we can say
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    like supercalifragilisticexpalidocious.
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    I'm showing off.
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    (Laughter)
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    But I'm also showing you
    what cueing can do.
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    I've been cueing in English,
    but we can also cue in Spanish,
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    and more than 60
    other languages and dialects.
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    What about American Sign Language? ASL?
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    Why do we need cues
    when we have signs?
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    ASL is a language in its own right
    for a vibrant culture and community.
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    Yes, ASL and Cued Speech are both
    visual means of communication,
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    but they are conveying
    different languages.
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    We have a sign language interpreter here,
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    but he is called
    an interpreter for a reason.
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    He is changing
    one language into another.
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    It is possible to use both ASL
    and Cued Speech, to be fluent in both.
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    You don't have to choose between them.
    You can do both.
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    But when you want direct access
    to spoken language,
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    cues are an effective
    and efficient way to do that.
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    What about technology?
    Cochlear implants. Digital hearing aids.
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    Technology doesn't work for all.
    And it doesn't work all of the time.
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    Technology isn't a substitute
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    for being able to clearly
    and consistently convey language.
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    When we cue to children who are deaf,
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    much research and experience shows us
    they learn language easily and naturally,
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    with powerful effects on literacy
    and academic achievement.
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    One landmark study demonstrated
    that when we cue to deaf children,
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    they read like their hearing peers.
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    And that's a very significant outcome
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    if you know the history of literacy issues
    for children who are deaf.
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    But that's not all we can do.
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    Children who have language
    or learning disabilities,
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    hearing children who are
    learning to read, need phonics,
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    need a good knowledge of spoken language
    as the basis for decoding print.
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    Cued Speech can be helpful
    in all of those situations.
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    Let's take a minute to see
    Cued Speech in action.
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    We'll see a video
    that was produced by Aaron Rose.
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    And Aaron and Mary-Beth are parents
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    who are both deaf and grew up
    using Cued Speech.
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    And now they are cueing.
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    They are sharing
    their native English language
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    with their daughter, Arabella.
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    You will see her learning
    and understanding language
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    when it is cued to her.
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    And you will see her beginning
    to cue back to her parents.
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    (Video) (Woman sneezing)
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    [Achoo!]
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    (Gasping) [Peek-a-boo!]
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    [Ooo. Ooo. Ooo.
    Ooo. Ooo. Ooo.]
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    [Arabella]
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    [Turn the page.]
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    [Purple fish.]
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    [Look at the firetruck.]
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    [Do you want some milk?]
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    [Leaf.]
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    [Show mommy the ball.]
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    [Butterfly. It's a butterfly.]
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    [Where is the turtle?]
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    [Where is the sun?]
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    [The sun's outside.]
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    [Where's the grapes?]
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    [Hoo. Hoo. Hoo.]
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    [Hoo. Hoo. Hoo.]
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    [More.]
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    [Yes!]
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    [Can you cue it? A.]
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    [B.]
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    [C.]
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    [D.]
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    [E.]
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    [One.]
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    [Two.]
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    [Three.]
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    [Go.]
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    [Go.]
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    (Applause)
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    I can tell you hundreds of stories
    and point to dozens of studies
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    that show the impact of Cued Speech.
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    I'll end with the encounter that led me
    to drop out of law school, learn to cue,
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    and decide that I wanted to work
    with families to help them communicate.
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    The first time I saw
    Cued Speech in action,
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    I asked the mother I just met
    why she had chosen to cue with her son,
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    and she said to me,
    "I want to share my language with my son.
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    I want him to understand my words.
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    I want him to get it
    when I say 'I love you'.
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    And he does."
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    For 50 years, Cued Speech
    has been a well-kept secret.
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    But language shouldn't be a secret.
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    Thousands of families
    have benefited from cueing,
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    but it still isn't widely enough known.
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    Someone you know needs access to language.
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    You can learn to cue.
    Or you can tell someone about it.
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    You can get the word out.
    You can give language a hand.
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    Thank you.
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    (Applause)
Title:
Giving language a helping hand | Cathy Rasmussen | TEDxFlourCity
Description:

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

Cathy presents cueing and its applications across the country.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
09:55

English subtitles

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