Miami Herald

Professor’s research focuses on saving teachers’ voices

- BY SUSAN SNYDER

Managing a classroom takes a lot, including a strong voice that can lift over the chatter of 30some students.

Enter Elizabeth Grillo, a professor at West Chester University, in Chester County, Pennsylvan­ia, whose research centers on helping teachers adjust their voices to avoid strain – and that’s no small thing, considerin­g that studies show more than half of teachers will experience voice problems during their career.

Grillo, a speech-language pathologis­t, has the distinctio­n of being the only West Chester professor to have received two grants from the National Institutes of Health for her work, totaling $797,000. She was set to be among more than 30 West Chester professors whose work was highlighte­d recently as the 17,552-student university celebrated its new status as a Research 2 (R2) university.

That designatio­n, given by the Carnegie Classifica­tion of Institutio­ns of Higher Education, means the school has “high research activity.” To qualify, a school must have awarded at least 20 doctorates during an academic year and have accrued at least $5 million in research expenditur­es. West Chester, which recorded $6.4 million in research in 2020, is one of only two universiti­es in the Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education to be classified as R2. West Chester was founded as a teachers college and, like other universiti­es in the state system, is best known for its emphasis on teaching.

Grillo, who instructs future speech pathologis­ts, said students assist her with her research, which is really what makes her studies possible.

She got her first NIH grant in 2015 and used it in part to develop a comprehens­ive voice-evaluation smartphone app, VoiceEvalU­8, that allows teachers to record their voices across multiple days at different times. Speech pathologis­ts then can listen to the recordings, which pick up perceptual, and aerodynami­c” data, and diagnose problems.

Teachers, Grillo said, have the highest risk among occupation­s for developing voice problems, such as lesions on the vocal cords. They’re also more likely to reduce their interactio­ns because of voice problems, and about onefifth of teachers have missed work as a result.

Kate La Spina, 23, who teaches seventh and eighth grades, can attest to that. Sometimes her voice is so tired and strained at the end of the day that she can’t talk to anyone. And she’s in year one of her teaching career.

“Sometimes my parents would call me and I’d say ‘Can we text instead?’ ” she said. “I would actually modify my instructio­n based on how my voice was feeling.”

She totally lost her voice the week before spring break, so she hung a sign around her neck – “laryngitis, can’t talk” – and used Google translator to communicat­e with her students, typing her message and letting her smartboard talk for her. She recently

bought a voice amplifier to ease the strain on her voice.

Having to wear masks because of the pandemic also made voice projection more challengin­g, she said. That’s been on Grillo’s radar, too. The best voice to use through masks is “oral twang,” Grillo said. Simply put, there are different levels of voice, and oral twang requires the narrowing of parts in an upper level to preserve the so-called basement where the vocal folds vibrate.

Oral twang creates a piercing sound and allows for prime projection, while lessening the strain on the voice, she said.

“It’s a way to project your voice in an efficient, healthy way while preserv“acoustic,

ing vocal fold vibration,” she said.

Sometimes “the belt” – or yelling – is needed, but there’s a healthy way to do that, too, she said.

Grillo has instructed and monitored student teachers as part of her research. She found that those who got the training fared better, voice-wise. Teachers need to master the use of multiple voices to be effective, she said. It takes about three weeks of training.

“They need a good voice for one-on-one communicat­ion with students,” she said. “They also need a voice to get loud over noise of the classroom, and they need a healthy voice to yell on the playground, in the gym, in the cafeteria.”

And, lastly, they require

a voice to talk quietly and confidenti­ally with students so that no other students can hear, she said.

It’s critical that teachers’ voices are preserved, and not just for them, Grillo said. Research has shown students’ learning is hindered in classrooms where teachers have voice problems, she said.

Grillo is developing a second app, called VoicePract­ice, through her other NIH grant, which came in 2021, that will allow teachers and others to practice healthy ways of using their voices.

“We need to do a better job of preparing our future generation of teachers so that their voice can be effective in the classroom,” she said. “That’s my goal.”

 ?? JOSE F. MORENO TNS ?? Professor and speech pathologis­t Elizabeth Grillo works with her speech pathology students at West Chester University.
JOSE F. MORENO TNS Professor and speech pathologis­t Elizabeth Grillo works with her speech pathology students at West Chester University.

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