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麻豆传媒在线 audiology students offer hearing screenings to Pre-K and kindergarteners in community schools

Posted in: Communication Sciences Disorders, Homepage News and Events

An audiology student administers a hearing test to a young child
A student in Newark waits patiently while 麻豆传媒在线 audiology student Nicole Genser conducts an otoacoustic emission test, which takes about three minutes.

Skylah, a Pre-K student at a school run by The Leaguers, Inc. in Roselle, holds a paper cookie to her left ear. She鈥檚 wearing headphones attached to one of the portable audiometers the 麻豆传媒在线 students and professors have brought to the school. Upon hearing a beep, the three-year-old gives the cookie to Quinley, the mouse from the children鈥檚 book If You Give a Mouse a Cookie, as instructed by Gita Balser, a second-year 麻豆传媒在线 audiology student.

Nearby, first-year audiology student Grace Gleba works to get a 4-year-old boy to play a similar game as she checks his hearing. 鈥淚f you hear a beep, throw the bean bag in the bucket, okay?鈥 Gleba instructs him.

Jowel holds the bean bag to his left ear. But after the beep, nothing.

鈥淒id you hear the beep?鈥 He nods.

鈥淲as it this ear or this ear?鈥 Gleba asks, pointing to the red and blue headphones he鈥檚 wearing. He points to one ear, then the other. Audiology Clinic Director Faith Mogila steps in to help, challenging the boy to beat her at tossing the bean bag into the bucket. They continue working with him, ultimately determining that he can hear, he鈥檚 just quite shy. Jowel moves on to an otoscopic examination with first-year audiology student Max St. Germain.

A student in Newark holds a block to her ear while listening for a 鈥渂eep鈥 through headphones.

In all, on this day about 40 Roselle children will have their hearing screened using the audiometer and a visual ear examination with an otoscope. In addition, they will undergo an otoacoustic emission test, which involves placing a tiny device in the ear that emits sound and records an echo, measuring cochlear function. It鈥檚 commonly used with babies and small children because it doesn鈥檛 require a behavioral response from them.

The four 麻豆传媒在线 students in Roselle are among 13 audiology doctoral students dispatched to three Early Head Start and Head Start programs run by The Leaguers, the oldest incorporated African American social service agency in New Jersey. The nonprofit organization provides services to 1,700 low-income families in Essex and Union counties. The hearing screenings, part of a partnership with the New Jersey Department of Health鈥檚 Early Hearing Detection and Intervention, provides a public service and gives audiology students hands-on experience. Audiology students in the University鈥檚 Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders also will provide hearing screenings to athletes participating in the Special Olympics New Jersey Summer Games in Ewing Township in mid-June.

A child in Newark holds a toy elephant to his forehead. He has been instructed by a 麻豆传媒在线 audiology doctoral student to connect the alphabet toy elephant to another elephant every time he hears a tone from the headphones. Giving the child an interesting game enhances his ability to listen even when the sounds are very soft.

On this day, screenings are also taking place in Irvington and Newark 鈥 the same day news of Mattel鈥檚 release of a new Barbie with hearing aids was making the rounds among the students. The activities used during the screenings are meant to make the assessments more entertaining and less scary for children. Audiology students were challenged to come up with new age-appropriate activities that could be used to condition a child from 3-5 years of age. Gleba鈥檚 idea for the mouse-and-cookie activity, sparked by a trip to her mother鈥檚 basement where her mom still keeps all of her childhood toys, was approved for use. In fact, it was her stuffed mouse that was used at the Roselle school. At The Leaguers school in Newark, five 麻豆传媒在线 students used toy elephants and building blocks to engage the children.

麻豆传媒在线 Audiology Clinical Professor Alexis Rooney examines a student鈥檚 ear with an otoscope at a Newark school.

Second-year audiology student Sean Kleczkowski is conducting his first screening of young children in a preschool setting. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really important to screen their hearing because they may be missing learning in class and not even know it,鈥 Kleczkowski says.

While children are screened as newborns, as required by law, hearing issues can still develop. 鈥淭hey could have a late onset [or progressive] hearing loss,鈥 Kleczkowski says. 鈥淚ncidents of hearing loss can double between birth and age 6, so it鈥檚 crucial that we do these screenings.鈥

Ivonne Jaramillo, a health and nutrition specialist with The Leaguers, said she and other specialists typically travel to schools to do hearing and vision screenings at the beginning of the school year, as required by the school, but that having an additional follow-up screening is also good. 鈥淚t鈥檚 important because we want early intervention,鈥 Jaramillo says. 鈥淣ot being able to hear could interfere with school productivity.鈥

Second-year audiology student Cindy Fernandez tests a Newark child鈥檚 hearing using an audiometer.

Pre-K teacher Mariam Gonzales monitors the proceedings as some of her preschoolers get tested while others await their turn. She鈥檚 optimistic that they will pass the screening. 鈥淚 haven鈥檛 had any problems with them not hearing me in the classroom,鈥 she says.

Parents, who provided consent for the screenings, will receive letters explaining their children鈥檚 results. Any student who doesn鈥檛 pass the screening will be referred to their pediatrician and an audiologist in their area. The parents of all the children tested will also receive literature explaining the importance of screening and signs of normal speech and language development.

Third year audiology student Rosie Ovadia places a tiny device in a Newark student鈥檚 ear for an otoacoustic emission test, which determines cochlear function.
Third year audiology student Rosie Ovadia places a tiny device in a Newark student鈥檚 ear for an otoacoustic emission test, which determines cochlear function.

At The Leaguers鈥 Early Head Start and Head Start programs in downtown Newark, first-year audiology student Vanessa Coppola says she enjoyed testing the children, 鈥淚t was a lot of kids and a lot of experience screening children.鈥 Some, she says, will need follow-up testing.

student Nicole Genser is holding a pointed finger up to her ear
Nicole Genser asks a child whether he heard a beep in his left ear; he holds an elephant to his ear and tosses it into a basket upon hearing a beep.

While Balser, second-year student Cindy Fernandez and third-year student Rosie Ovadia had tested young children before, more often than not these screenings are the first opportunity for 麻豆传媒在线 audiology students to screen children, says Mogila.

At 麻豆传媒在线鈥檚 audiology clinic, the students work mostly with adults who are in a soundproof booth. At the Newark school, 鈥渋t was interesting,鈥 says Nicole Genser, a first-year student. 鈥淲e had to think about the best way to set it all out in terms of environment and noise. The kids were great.鈥

Professor Maryrose McInerney assists audiology student Alyssa Bonapace, in conducting a otoacoustic emission test on a young student in Newark.
Professor Maryrose McInerney assists audiology student Alyssa Bonapace, in conducting a otoacoustic emission test on a young student in Newark.

Professor Joan Besing, director of Clinical Graduate Programs in the Department of Communication Sciences and Disorders, says going to schools sometimes affords 麻豆传媒在线 students new experiences. 鈥淭here were some students who had tubes in their ears, our students hadn鈥檛 seen that before. It provides them with hands-on experience so that they become more comfortable.鈥

There鈥檚 also the added bonus of giving back while also learning. 鈥淚t鈥檚 really rewarding to be able to do screenings for one鈥檚 community,鈥 says Fernandez. 鈥淲e鈥檙e applying our knowledge for the better good.鈥

Vanessa Coppola tests a student in Newark.
Vanessa Coppola tests a student in Newark.
Rosie Ovadia examines a child鈥檚 eardrum.
A child places toys into a container, indicating that she鈥檚 heard a beep through her headphones during a hearing exam.
Cindy Fernandez tests a student鈥檚 hearing.

To learn more about the doctorate of audiology program visit Audiology.

Story by Staff Writer Sylvia A. Martinez. Photos by University Photographer Mike Peters.