Cue Charts
Cued Speech makes all the phonemes (sound-based units) of speech
visible by using eight handshapes in four positions near the mouth
in combination with the lipshapes and articulation movements of
speech. Read more
Definition
Cued Speech is a visual communication system that uses eight
handshapes in four different placements near the face in combination
with the mouth movements of speech to make the sounds of spoken
language look different from each other. Read
more
History
Dr. R. Orin Cornett completed the invention of Cued Speech in 1966.
Read more
Info Papers
Fact: Cued Speech does not require the use of speech or voice to
communicate clearly, nor was it developed for the purpose of improving
a deaf person’s speech skills. While speech therapists and
auditory rehabilitation specialists have employed the use of cueing
in therapy sessions as a biofeedback tool, it is considered a secondary
benefit of the system. In the 1960s, it was believed that phonemes
and speech were interrelated and could not be separated, and this
is partly why the system was named “Cued Speech.” Read
articles and materials that will help break the myth about Cued
Speech. Read more
- Speech-Language Pathologist Uses Cued
Speech for Hearing Children
Carla Davidson is a speech-language pathologist at Longridge Elementary
School in Greece, NY (near Rochester). She uses Cued Speech on
a daily basis while providing therapy to with children who are
not deaf or hard-of-hearing. Carla learned to cue eight years
ago and has not stopped since! She became fluent in Cued Speech
while working with deaf students in private practice. Read
More
- Cued Speech and Special Children
Cued Speech is used with children with and without hearing loss
for a variety of purposes, such as accelerating the learning phonics
or speech or language instruction. The children may be typical
children or have autism, apraxia, cerebral palsy, deaf-blindness,
developmental disabilities or other learning needs. Our most special
children are those who have one or more additional disabilities
with their hearing loss. Read
more
- Cued Speech and Autism, Pervasive Developmental
Disorders
Cued Speech has been and is being used with children who
have autism and other Pervasive Developmental Disorders (PDD),
as one part of individualized packages of special services. Read
more
- Down Syndrome & Cued Speech
Speech pathologists were the first persons — beginning in
the early 1980’s — to begin using Cued Speech with
children with Down Syndrome and other developmental disabilities.
Parents and educators followed their lead. This author has experience
with three children with Down Syndrome, two boys six years old
and a girl 4 years old. Each child was unique. Read
More
Languages/Dialects
Cued Speech has been adapted to approximately 60 languages and dialects.
Dr. Cornett wrote guidelines for adapting Cued Speech to additional
languages. Read more
Research
Annotated Bibliography of Research Findings Regarding Cued Speech.
The Cued Speech Journal pertains broadly to studies of Cued Speech
including research, teaching methods, and literature reviews. Read
more
Special Populations
Cued Speech was created originally to enable parents of children
who are deaf or hard of hearing to easily make their spoken language
clearly visible, so that their children could internalize the appropriate
phonemic language base for literacy through exposure.
Speech-language therapists, special educators, reading teachers,
linguistics professors and others have expanded the uses of Cued
Speech to benefit individuals with a variety of language, speech,
communication and learning needs. Read more
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