Cape Times

Reading difficulti­es link to hearing problems

- Helen L Breadmore

NEW research shows some children who struggle to read or write may actually have hearing problems

Ear infections are the number one reason for preschool children to visit the GP.

These can be painful, cause difficulty with balance and can also lead to temporary hearing loss.

Most parents assume there will be no long lasting effects once an ear infection clears up – and most of the time this is true.

But in some cases, children can become permanentl­y deaf after repeated infections – which is also known as “glue ear”.

It seems that repeated ear infections can also increase the risk of reading difficulti­es – as our recent study shows. We found that a third of children who had repeated ear infections had reading difficulti­es at age nine.

In another group of children, we also found that a quarter of children with reading difficulti­es in year four of school had some degree of deafness that their parents and teachers were not aware of.

Most children who have reading difficulti­es are not deaf or hard of hearing – but there is a significan­t overlap. This is because learning to read builds on a child’s existing knowledge of language. So children who can’t always hear speech well can find it harder to work out how spoken words “map” onto printed words.

In this way, learning to read can be difficult for children who are deaf. Even mild deafness can have a big impact on hearing. And children with mild or moderate deafness can also have trouble understand­ing conversati­on in busy environmen­ts – such as the classroom.

That said, the link between hearing and reading difficulti­es isn’t inevitable – not all deaf children struggle to read.

This is because learning to read involves the combinatio­n of many different skills – such as understand­ing the link between letters and speech sounds, knowledge of grammar, memory for spelling patterns and the use of context. And all of those skills can help children to learn to read and write effectivel­y, even if they do initially have difficulty.

All newborn babies have their hearing screened in the UK, and the government’s “healthy child” policy also recommends hearing screens when children start school.

These policies have dramatical­ly increased early identifica­tion for deaf children. But school entry hearing screens are not offered in all areas of the UK. And because of funding cuts, services are even being withdrawn in some places.

When you consider that around half of the 50 000 deaf children in the UK were not born deaf but lost their hearing during childhood, it is easy to see how these children – with mild, fluctuatin­g or acquired deafness – can be missed by existing screening procedures. And this of course then makes them more at risk of poorer literacy outcomes.

It is clear children who have difficulty learning to read should have current and past hearing test results taken into account. These children should also be reassessed where appropriat­e, so that both doctors and teachers – as well as parents – can work together to help that child.

This is important, because children who have had a lot of ear infections have been found to have very specific difficulti­es with perception of speech sounds. And in most cases, other reading and spelling related skills are not impaired.

What this means, is that parents and teachers could not only provide extra support to help these children understand the links between letters and sounds, but they can also use those other skills to support their reading – enabling them to reach their full potential – The Conversati­on

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