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Music as a Motivator for Communication for Students with Deafblindness. Friday, August 1, 2014 AER Conference – San Antonio, Texas Presented by Shannon Darst, Ph.D , CTVI, Certified Music Teacher. Overview of the Presentation.
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Music as a Motivator for Communication for Students with Deafblindness Friday, August 1, 2014 AER Conference – San Antonio, Texas Presented by Shannon Darst, Ph.D, CTVI, Certified Music Teacher
Overview of the Presentation • Explanation of the study entitled “Music as a Motivator for Communication for Students with Deafblindness” • Brief description of the topic of the study • Statement of the problem • Purpose of the study • Research questions • Brief description of study methodology • Results and discussion of the study • Significance of the study • Implication for future research • Examples of ways to incorporate results into daily educational programming
The Topic of the Study • Communication for students with deafblindness • Motivating communication • Use of music and music therapy techniques for motivating communication
Statement of the Problem • Motivators for expressive communication for students with deafblindness • Music and music therapy techniques in practice • Lack of formal research on this topic
Purpose of the Study • To investigate the use of music as a motivator for expressive communication for students with deafblindness • Use of naturalistic observation • Measurement of types of expressive communication • Identification of types of music or musical activity that elicit expressive communication
Research Questions • What are the student’s receptive and expressive communication levels? • How are the student’s receptive and expressive communication levels reflected during the music activities? • How is music a motivator for a student to communicate expressively? • In what ways does the student’s deafblindness affect the student’s communication skills during the music activities?
Methodology • Qualitative design • Data collection • Data analysis
Results and Discussion – Research Question 1 What are the student’s receptive and expressive communication levels? STAGE of COMMUNICATION • Student 1 and Student 2 began and ended the study in the illocutionary stage. • Student 3 began and ended the study in the locutionary study, with most of his expressive communication being in the illocutionary stage. COMMUNICATION MATRIX RESULTS • Student 1 made progress across all four domains and in all levels of communication based on Communication Matrix results • Student 2 made progress in one domain and in two levels of communication within that domain. • Student 3 made progress across three domains and in one level of one of those domains. OVERALL • All three participants gained noticeable communication skills over the course of the study.
Results and Discussion – Research Question 2Student 1 How are the student’s receptive and expressive communication levels reflected during the music activities?
Results and Discussion – Research Question 2Student 2 How are the student’s receptive and expressive communication levels reflected during the music activities?
Results and Discussion – Research Question 2Student 3 How are the student’s receptive and expressive communication levels reflected during the music activities?
Results and Discussion – Research Question 3 • How is music a motivator for a student to communicate expressively? • All participants communicated during music activities by demonstrating: • personal desires and preferences • refusal • attention to an object and/or another person • turn-taking • an understanding of cause-and-effect • an understanding the actions of others • anticipation of the next activity • Certain activities motivated all participants • Playing keyboard • Hearing a specific song • Playing drums • Reading calendar
Results and Discussion – Research Question 4 • In what ways does the student’s deafblindness affect the student’s communication skills during the music activities? • Lack of any visual input • Primary sense used was tactile, with the auditory sense used in conjunction with the tactile sense. • Reading calendar was the only purely tactile activity during this study • Hearing a voice was the least motivating to participants
Significance of the Study • Music can be used as a motivator for communication for students with deafblindness • Students with deafblindness may benefit from music and music activities in their educational programming
Implications for Future Research • Research to support future studies • Future study topics
Music for Communication in Daily Educational Programming • For all settings • Use of rhythm, vibration, and tactile stimuli to convey concepts • For music class • Active learning • Cooperative play • Group/team activities
Questions or Comments • THINK OUTSIDE THE BOX! • BE DARING! • If at first you don’t succeed, try it again and again!
References Rowland, C. (1996). Communication Matrix. Portland: Child Development and Rehabilitation Center, Oregon Health Sciences University. Retrieved from http://www.communicationmatrix.org/Default.aspx