Holly - One Family’s Story
We have two profoundly deaf sons and we started to learn Cued Speech when our older son wasabout nine months old. As I cued, our son’s receptive vocabulary grew very quickly. By the time he was two years old he understood a lot of simple sentences and by three years four months he was using sentences like “I want to go downstairs to help Daddy”.
Typically, sentences would include all the ‘little’words but few, if any, consonants and sentences would always be spoken not cued. He was also starting to read. Some time before his third birthday I started to read directly to him from books rather than talking about pictures. He became very interested in the words, particularly words that were new to him, and he loved nonsense words. As he began to read I started to show him that some of the letters represented sounds and he very quickly made the association between the sounds that hecould not hear, but knew existed because of the cues, and the letters.
Both of our children started to read very early, around the age of three, and both started school with good understanding of language, nearly age appropriate. Both children have attended their local, hearing school and each have had a full-time Cued Speech transliterator. Their peripatetic teacher has regularly tested their reading ages, vocabulary and grammar. Their reading ages have continued to be one or two years ahead of their hearing contemporaries.