Cargando…

A case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in Tanzania

BACKGROUND: Hearing is essential for learning in school, and untreated hearing loss may hinder quality education and equal opportunities. Detection of children with hearing loss is the first step in improving the learning situation, but effective interventions must also be provided. Hearing aids can...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Tronstad, Tron V., Gjessing, Bjørn, Ørland, Ingvild, Øderud, Tone, Mnyanyi, Cosmas, Myovela, Isaack, Øygarden, Jon
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: AOSIS 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9724067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36483846
http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/ajod.v11i0.974
_version_ 1784844329782607872
author Tronstad, Tron V.
Gjessing, Bjørn
Ørland, Ingvild
Øderud, Tone
Mnyanyi, Cosmas
Myovela, Isaack
Øygarden, Jon
author_facet Tronstad, Tron V.
Gjessing, Bjørn
Ørland, Ingvild
Øderud, Tone
Mnyanyi, Cosmas
Myovela, Isaack
Øygarden, Jon
author_sort Tronstad, Tron V.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Hearing is essential for learning in school, and untreated hearing loss may hinder quality education and equal opportunities. Detection of children with hearing loss is the first step in improving the learning situation, but effective interventions must also be provided. Hearing aids can provide great benefit for children with hearing impairment, but this may not be a realistic alternative in many low- and middle-income countries because of the shortage of hearing aids and hearing care service providers. OBJECTIVE: In this study, alternative solutions were tested to investigate the potential to improve the learning situation for children with hearing impairment. METHOD: Two technical solutions (a personal amplifier with and without remote microphone) were tested, in addition to an approach where the children with hearing impairment were moved closer to the teacher. A Swahili speech-in-noise test was developed and used to assess the effect of the interventions. RESULTS: The personal sound amplifier with wireless transmission of sound from the teacher to the child gave the best results in the speech-in-noise test. The amplifier with directive microphone had limited effect and was outperformed by the intervention where the child was moved closer to the teacher. CONCLUSION: This study, although small in sample size, showed that personal amplification with directive microphones did little to assist children with hearing impairment. It also indicated that simple actions can be used to improve the learning situation for children with hearing impairment but that the context (e.g. room acoustical parameters) must be taken into account when implementing interventions. CONTRIBUTION: The study gives insight into how to improve the learning situation for school children with hearing impairment and raises concerns about some of the known technical solutions currently being used.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9724067
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher AOSIS
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-97240672022-12-07 A case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in Tanzania Tronstad, Tron V. Gjessing, Bjørn Ørland, Ingvild Øderud, Tone Mnyanyi, Cosmas Myovela, Isaack Øygarden, Jon Afr J Disabil Original Research BACKGROUND: Hearing is essential for learning in school, and untreated hearing loss may hinder quality education and equal opportunities. Detection of children with hearing loss is the first step in improving the learning situation, but effective interventions must also be provided. Hearing aids can provide great benefit for children with hearing impairment, but this may not be a realistic alternative in many low- and middle-income countries because of the shortage of hearing aids and hearing care service providers. OBJECTIVE: In this study, alternative solutions were tested to investigate the potential to improve the learning situation for children with hearing impairment. METHOD: Two technical solutions (a personal amplifier with and without remote microphone) were tested, in addition to an approach where the children with hearing impairment were moved closer to the teacher. A Swahili speech-in-noise test was developed and used to assess the effect of the interventions. RESULTS: The personal sound amplifier with wireless transmission of sound from the teacher to the child gave the best results in the speech-in-noise test. The amplifier with directive microphone had limited effect and was outperformed by the intervention where the child was moved closer to the teacher. CONCLUSION: This study, although small in sample size, showed that personal amplification with directive microphones did little to assist children with hearing impairment. It also indicated that simple actions can be used to improve the learning situation for children with hearing impairment but that the context (e.g. room acoustical parameters) must be taken into account when implementing interventions. CONTRIBUTION: The study gives insight into how to improve the learning situation for school children with hearing impairment and raises concerns about some of the known technical solutions currently being used. AOSIS 2022-11-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9724067/ /pubmed/36483846 http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/ajod.v11i0.974 Text en © 2022. The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee: AOSIS. This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License.
spellingShingle Original Research
Tronstad, Tron V.
Gjessing, Bjørn
Ørland, Ingvild
Øderud, Tone
Mnyanyi, Cosmas
Myovela, Isaack
Øygarden, Jon
A case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in Tanzania
title A case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in Tanzania
title_full A case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in Tanzania
title_fullStr A case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in Tanzania
title_full_unstemmed A case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in Tanzania
title_short A case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in Tanzania
title_sort case study of interventions to facilitate learning for pupils with hearing impairment in tanzania
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9724067/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36483846
http://dx.doi.org/10.4102/ajod.v11i0.974
work_keys_str_mv AT tronstadtronv acasestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT gjessingbjørn acasestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT ørlandingvild acasestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT øderudtone acasestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT mnyanyicosmas acasestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT myovelaisaack acasestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT øygardenjon acasestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT tronstadtronv casestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT gjessingbjørn casestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT ørlandingvild casestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT øderudtone casestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT mnyanyicosmas casestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT myovelaisaack casestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania
AT øygardenjon casestudyofinterventionstofacilitatelearningforpupilswithhearingimpairmentintanzania