Litcius/Paper detail

The development of early numeracy in deaf and hard of hearing children acquiring spoken language

Anna Shusterman, Rebecca Peretz‐Lange, Talia Berkowitz, Emily Carrigan

2022Child Development14 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Most deaf and hard-of-hearing (DHH) children are born to hearing parents and steered toward spoken rather than signed language, introducing a delay in language access. This study investigated the effects of this delay on number acquisition. DHH children (N = 44, meanage = 58 months, 21F, >50% White) and typically-hearing (TH) children (N = 79, meanage = 49 months, 51F, >50% White) were assessed on number and language in 2011–13. DHH children showed similar trajectories to TH children but delayed timing; a binary logistic regression showed that the odds of being a cardinal-principle (CP) knower were 17 times higher for TH children than DHH children, controlling for age (d = .69). Language fully mediated the association between deaf/hearing group and number knowledge, suggesting that language access sets the pace for number acquisition.

Topics & Concepts

Spoken languagePsychologyLanguage developmentAudiologyNumeracyOddsLanguage acquisitionPaceLanguage delayLogistic regressionHearing lossCochlear implantationDevelopmental psychologyLinguisticsMedicineLiteracyMathematics educationGeodesyInternal medicineGeographyPhilosophyPedagogyCognitive and developmental aspects of mathematical skillsReading and Literacy DevelopmentLanguage Development and Disorders