Revista CEFAC (Nov 2021)

Using a screening tool to identify the auditory behavior of students who are learning to read and write

  • Giulia Ádni Viana Santos,
  • Maria Luiza Lopes Timóteo de Lima,
  • Manoelina Xavier Cavalcante,
  • Leonardo Gleygson Angelo Venâncio,
  • Cleide Fernandes Teixeira

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1982-0216/202123413020
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 4

Abstract

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ABSTRACT Purpose: to analyze the use of a screening tool, by teachers, to identify the auditory behavior of students who are learning to read and write. Methods: a cross-sectional study including 22 students who answered the Fisher’s Auditory Problems Checklist (QFISHER). The analysis of this questionnaire approached the categories of hearing, attention, memory, language, and school performance. The chi-square statistical test and Mann-Whitney test were used to compare the scores between the age groups, considering the 5% significance level. Results: school performance had the worst frequency in QFISHER (87.72%), followed by attention (62.10%), language (60.53%), and hearing (59.65%). The median revealed worse assessment in school performance (100.0%) followed by attention (60.0%). The QFISHER overall score was 66.7%. The comparison between age groups did not reveal any significant difference for the domains assessed. Conclusion: the QFISHER, used by teachers, as a screening tool for children who are learning to read and write, can identify behavioral changes suggestive of auditory processing disorder, broadening the possibility of early interventions.

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