CAPD Handout for Parents and Teachers



The concept of a central auditory processing disorder (CAPD) is often
difficult for educators and parents to understand. In a sense, a child with
normal hearing and a central auditory processing disorder is comparable to a
child with normal vision and a reading disorder. Vision acuity, or seeing,
is good but the mind has a problem making use of the input from the eyes.
For reasons not well understood, organizing the abstract symbols of letters
and words is a problem for a child with a reading disorder. Children with
CAPD have a similar problems comprehending speech. The sensory system (in
this case the ear) that brings speech into the body is working properly, but
the parts of the brain which analyze and interpret the sensory information
are not. This problem becomes more apparent in poorer listening environments
such as open classrooms and background noise. A child may not show the
problem until he or she enters school.

The child can hear, but listening is the problem. Think of the problem you
would have if suddenly you found yourself in England at the time of
Shakespear. The speech is English but in a strange, accented style with
different constructions and meanings. You might not comprehend enough of the
common words to order a meal. Find this hard to believe? Just have someone
rapidly read a section from Hamlet to you. It takes longer to comprehend
than if it were written in modern structures and usage. Not all CAPD
children have the same problems. Some have problems sequencing speech
sounds, others have problems understanding speech in background noise, in
some the timing appears off.

Nobody knows exactly why CAPD occurs or what is wrong. There is no evidence
of brain damage. Birth and developmental histories are often unremarkable.
Ear infections have been implicated as a factor in some children but not in
others. Many children with CAPD do poorer on measures of neuromaturation of
the auditory system. Some experts feel that CAPD may be a form of learning
disability. Children may or may not have a speech disorder or language
problem. A common presumption is that a child who has CAPD should have a
language disorder. While this can occur, it is often not the case. What is
most striking is a child of normal intelligence working far below their
ability at school and having difficulty at home.

The lack of knowledge is frustrating for all who work with CAPD children but
particularly parents and educators. It is hard to know if what is being done
is helping. Below are suggestions which target specific difficulties a CAPD
child may have. These also work with children who have hearing loss. We have
made great strides in diagnosis and understanding CAPD. More research needs
to be done. Research funding is never enough.

Background Noise at School, Home, and Other Places

Environment:
Noisy background. This does not need to be loud. Even mild
noises such as the hum of a fan or the sounds of a quiet crowd may be enough
to create a poor listening and learning environment for the child.

Behavior: failure to respond when spoken to, distractable, over active,
confused, or shy.

Teachers:
1.
Make every effort to eliminate extraneous noise. Open classrooms are a
very poor environment for CAPD children. Small enclosed classrooms work best
as long as they are in a quiet part of the building away from traffic and
other noises.
2. Move closer to the child (a better signal to noise ratio), obtain visual
attention by touching him or in some other manner. This is very important
when introducing a new idea, changing subjects, or giving directions. All
individuals respond better when attention is directed at the speaker. The
CAPD child needs additional prompting in order to have attention focused
properly.
Sound intensity drops quickly over a short distance. Moving closer is a
great, easy help.
3. Seat the child in the front of the class where he or she has good visual
reception of the area where most teaching is done. Avoid seating by open
doors or windows. Make sure the child can see the speaker's face. Avoid
strong shadows which hid the face. Standing in front of windows on a sunny
day will hide the face.
4. Earplugs or muffs may help the child during quiet study periods. The
earplugs will reduce extraneous noise and may allow the child to concentrate
on his work. If all the children in a class can use them then it will
prevent one child from being singled out as different.
5. Provide additional written or visual material. In some cases, outlines of
material to be presented verbally may help. Oral changes to instructions
printed on the board or handed out should be provided in writing to CAPD
children.

Parents:

Homes are increasing noisy places with TVS, radios, traffic noises, and the
like. We suggest a study time when no televisions or radios are being played
in the house. The same basic rules apply as for the classroom:

1. Obtain visual attention
2. Get rid of background noise and other distractions.
3. Seat the child close to the speaker.


In other words if the child is not paying attention or asking for
information to be repeated. Obtain visual attention before speaking. Don't
try to carry on a conversation across large rooms, while the TV is playing,
or if the child is in another room. This will only frustrate both of you. If
you want to carry on a conversation, be in the same room with the same
purpose - to talk with each other.

Away from home, be aware of the environment. In noisy places, such as a
mall, the child may not hear your instructions on where to be at what time.
It is better to minimize background noise by moving to a quiet place rather
than yelling.

Your child may have problems at church and other places of gathering. Many
church schools have hard, reflective walls resulting in reverberations. The
normal auditory system will merge reverberations into a single auditory
image. The CAPD child may not be able to do this. The suggestions given
above for the classroom will apply to any meeting place.

Be aware that your child may not like to go to parities, meetings and other
gatherings because they are difficult and frustrating. Avoid subjecting him
or her too often to this type of situation.

For Everyone:

1.
Be Supportive
2.
Be Understanding
3.
Experiment - keep a log of what works and doesn't.
4. Slow down. Rapid presentation of many facts doesn't help. Modify your
speech patterns, use simpler constructions, and slow down the rate of
presentation.
5. Maintain visual contact. This will help the child maintain attention.

Help the child be responsible. This means encouraging the child to check
that he "heard" all of the instructions. If a plan of action was discussed,
then changed, check that the child is aware of the change. This is important
for homework assignments, family plans, trips to the store, and other
projects. Write information down. Speech is considered to be very redundant,
but some parts of it have even less information for the child to rely on.
Numbers, dates, addresses, and names are of this category. A person's phone
number can be very hard to catch if spoken just once and rapidly. Encourage
the child to ask that this type of information be written down by the
speaker.

Summary: What this first part discusses is listening under poor conditions.
The professionals would call this listening in a poor signal to noise
ratios. The signal you want is hidden by background noise or the noise
simply interferes. Try this at home. Turn on the TV as loud as possible. Sit
as far from another person as possible and ask them to read a difficult
passage from a book. Say Shakespear or Kant while speaking in a quiet
conversational level. Can't understand it too well? Try the suggestions
above: reduce the interference, move closer, watch the speaker, ask for
visual aids or more explanation. This will work. Many - probably most
children with CAPD have trouble in mild amounts of background noise. A lot
of this is common sense. Most of us have some degree of problem hearing
under poor listening conditions. The CAPD child has more of a problem.

This is also known as an auditory figure-ground problem. Sort of like the
picture puzzles with hidden images but in this case the images are auditory
and they are hidden in noise.

Environment: Any type.

Behavior:
Unable to follow simple commands or directions in proper order.
May complete only part of the sequence.

1. Be specific. Break down instructions into simple, concise, concrete
actions. "Wash your hands" may be better than "Go clean up."

2. Be brief. Long sequences of commands may be too much. Rather than say,
"Go in the house, put your coat away in the hall closet, pick up your toys
in the living room, don't turn on the TV, and make your bed" tell him/her to
do one or two things then return to you for more instructions.

3. Slow down rate of presentation.

4. Allow more time for processing and comprehension of the instructions.
CAPD does better if they are allowed more time to process and organize the
information.

5. Develop compensatory methods to check that instructions were understood.
One method used by the hearing impaired is to repeat back to the speaker
what was heard. When this is done, the speaker can identify errors and
correct them. The speaker should not simply repeat the message in exactly
the same way but modify it to provide additional information about the part
not understood.

6. Confer with the child about new information or material. If it is not
understood, review it again and introduce new elements to aid understanding.
Use of gestures and visual aids is encouraged.