Experience Books for Growing Listening and Spoken Language- Free Resource

 
 

The 5 W’s - What, Who, Where, When and Why of Experience Books

What?

Experience Books are an important tool for young children who are deaf and hard of hearing learning spoken language through listening. Experience Books are handmade books about everyday happenings. To a child, an Experience Book is a “Book about Me” made by their parents. To adults, it is a powerful brain-building opportunity for growing a child’s listening and spoken language learning. 

Experience Books have a long history in auditory verbal therapy. They were introduced by auditory verbal pioneer Helen H. Beebe in the 1950s. “Beebe” as she was called by the children is renowned to have begun every therapy session by asking, “Where’s your book?” and families ought not to show up empty handed. Beebe received an update and glimpse into the child and their family’s life and needs while talking together about the latest pictures. Experience Books serve this same role and purpose today. They are valuable when coaching parents and caregivers with Listening and Spoken Language LSL Strategies and Techniques in intervention sessions.

Who?

When parents and caregivers first learn about Experience Books most simply reply, “I can’t draw.” But with guidance and coaching, they do and quickly realize Experience Books are not dependent on artistic abilities. The book contains simple drawings where each family member is identified by a specific color stick figure. One creative mom took headshot photos of each family member and made copies. Her son’s book contained stick people with photo faces. Experience Books are similar to scrapbooks enhanced with stickers, mementos, and sometimes photos. A simple drawing serves as a talk-about reminder to elicit language and listening fun with a young child. They are only a tool to stimulate language learning therefore should not be time-consuming or labor-intensive.

 
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Where?

Opportunities for daily entries in a child’s Experience Book are everywhere. Day in and day out. A spill at dinner, finding a spider in a web, feeding the dog, a virtual call with grandma, a scratch requiring a band-aid all present brain-building language learning opportunities. Daily routines are important. Brushing teeth, matching pairs of socks, washing a window, picking flowers, raking the leaves or running errands. The mundane is worthwhile to talk about and to fill the pages.

When?

A daily entry is the goal but individualized by each family. Scheduling a regular time for the parent to make entries such as after the child is in bed and a specific time each day to talk about the picture with the child such as at breakfast is important. For older listeners, sitting shoulder to shoulder with the adult while drawing the picture and talking together can be a rich language-learning time.  

Why?

Experience Books build brains, grow language and are memory makers. While Experience Books can be created with a variety of apps and on websites handcrafted books are often dog-eared and over time taped together. They are well used, well-loved and this is how we know they are fulfilling their purpose. Just like families who visited the Helen Beebe Speech and Hearing Center in Pennsylvania heard, “Where's your book?” consider doing the same. The important thing is to get started! 

Tips Creating An Experience Book

 "A picture is worth a thousand words" is an old adage meaning that multiple ideas can be conveyed by a

single image. So keep the drawings simple and add keepsakes or photos occasionally to make the book come alive. An entry in an Experience Book serves as a reminder and a tool to grow meaningful listening and talking opportunities

 
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Promote meaningful listening and talking opportunities with Experience Books by: 

Talking about the entry before pointing to the pictures. Listen first!

Describing the pictures with a play-by-play of the experience. 

Talking about what the child is thinking and their feelings. 

Using serve and return conversation turn-taking between you and the child.

Encouraging responses from the child with an expectant look, leaning in, pausing and wait time.

Expanding on the child’s comments with more complex language and talking about related experiences. 

Using open-ended questions rather than those that have only a yes or no reply.

Printable Experience Book Covers

Choose one of the Experience Book covers provided or create one of your own to personalize your child's story. Depending on the child's age, talk together about all 20 options while making a decision. Discuss their interests and why a cover would be a good match and why not. Lead a thinking conversation and match each cover to a child they know. Example: My friend, Jacob is an expert on dinosaurs. He would love the green cover with T-Rex dinosaurs.  The cover encourages ownership of their book and story. Well-loved Experience Books are full of entries and stories to tell to family and friends.

Auditory Verbal Therapy Science, Research, and Practic

My summer reading - all 934 pages. Auditory Verbal Therapy Science, Research, and Practice. Thank you, editors, who are friends Warren Estabrooks, Helen McCaffrey Morrison, and Karen M-Lux.

The book is divided into five parts:

Part I: Overview of Auditory-Verbal Therapy: Foundations and Fundamentals

This section covers the philosophy, history, and principles of AVT, including outcome data, results of a new survey of LSLS Cert. AVT community on global practice patterns in AVT, information on auditory brain development, and evaluation of evidence-based and evidence-informed practice for the new decade.

Part II: Audiology, Hearing Technologies, and Speech Acoustics, and Auditory-Verbal Therapy

This section covers audiology and AVT, hearing aids, implantable and hearing assistive devices, and in-depth speech acoustics for AVT.

Part III: Developmental Domains in Auditory-Verbal Therapy

This section covers the development of listening, three-dimensional conversations, speech, play, cognition, and literacy, as applied to AVT.

Part IVThe Practice of Auditory-Verbal Therapy

Here strategies for developing listening, talking, and thinking in AVT are covered, including parent coaching, the AVT Session: planning, delivery and evaluation, music and singing, assessment, and inclusion of “AVT children” in the regular preschool.

Part VExtending and Expanding the Practice of Auditory-Verbal Therapy

The final section includes information on children with complex hearing issues, children with additional challenges, multilingualism, children and families experiencing adversity, tele-practice, coaching and mentoring practitioners, and cost-benefit of AVT.

 
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Listening Dective

 
 

LISTENING DETECTIVE is a game created to provide practice with descriptive vocabulary and complex sentences. Players take turns describing and identifying objects on a colorful, mysterious and enticing game board.

The Describer - gives the descriptions to the other player(s) which targets expressive language skills. They describe exactly with their words. Acting out or using body language is not allowed.

The Detective - listens and tries to determine what the other player is describing which targets auditory comprehension, memory skills and critical thinking. They listen to a description, create a picture in their mind and then name the object.

This resource includes:

  • coaching handout for parents, teachers and therapist with prompts aimed at expanding vocabulary using descriptions and definitions

  • Listening and Spoken Language (LSL) Tips for game play

Listening Detective can be - 

  • Printed or played at home or in face-to face sessions.

  • Used on a computer, iPad or teletherapy platforms using PDF reader apps such as the free Adobe Reader DC . In teletherapy, open the PDF, then screen share that window into the teletherapy platform.

 
 

Auditory Verbal Graduate and Now 2020 College Graduate

 
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Congratulations to 2020 college graduate and auditory verbal graduate Andela Barun. I am so very proud of your accomplishments and tremendous success. I love your determination, sense of adventure, kind heart, and cheerful smile. It has been my great pleasure to be your auditory-verbal therapist and also your friend. You have a bright future! ❤️

I am thankful your parents put their trust in me as we worked together along your journey learning to listen and talk. You all are an inspiration and source of hope for other families who want their child who is deaf or hard of hearing to use spoken language and reach their full potential.

Lynn A. Wood - Recognized As A Brain Builder

 
 

Lynn A. Wood, MA CCC-A LSLS Cert. AVT.

Rehab Audiologist and Auditory Verbal Therapist at the Auditory Verbal Center of Wheaton in Illinois

Lynn is a nationally recognized Listening and Spoken Language Specialist with over 35 years of experience. She is an audiologist by degree and specializes in pediatric auditory verbal therapy, post cochlear implant auditory rehabilitation for children and adults and therapy for individuals with auditory processing needs. 

Lynn was in the inaugural group of professionals who sat for the first Auditory Verbal Therapy certification exam in 1994. She established her practice in 1988, becoming one of the first audiologists in the nation to open a practice devoted exclusively to auditory rehabilitation. Lynn has provided these services at her Wheaton office for over 25 years.

Lynn served as the Programs Leader at HearingFirst.org, and has been an active consultant in the field of auditory rehabilitation to Advanced Bionics, Cochlear International, Bio-Speech Inc. and other companies and schools. Lynn presents at local, state, and national conferences and has worked internationally mentoring professionals providing auditory verbal therapy for children with hearing loss and their families. Lynn served on the AG Bell Certification Council, Illinois Chapter of the AG Bell Association, Illinois Hands & Voices and as a member of the Global Foundation for Children with Hearing Loss.