

Classroom
Management Strategies for
Children
with Auditory Processing Disorders
- Seek classroom placement to avoid settings that are noisy
or reverberant and avoid open classroom placements;
- Provide the child preferential seating near the place where
the teacher spends most of his/her time giving auditory instructions, and away from
distracting auditory and visual "noise;"
- Teach the child to use visual information (look and
listen);
- Encourage teachers to gain the childs attention
before giving auditory instruction;
- Check the childs comprehension of auditory
information by asking a child to re-tell the instruction;
- Rephrase and restate important information to provide
auditory redundancy;
- Counsel teachers and parents regarding the childs
auditory needs;
- Use FM systems if recommended by the audiologist to enhance
the speech to noise ratio for the child;
- Teach compensatory strategies depending on the childs
individual needs;
- Teach listening skills, including when to listen for
meaning rather than exact repetition. Teach the child to wait until instructions are
completed before he/she begins a task;
- Give the child time to think and respond to auditory
instructions or questions;
- Use attention devices such as calling the childs
name, saying "listen" and "Are you ready?" before giving assignments;
- Limit the amount of information in each instruction;
- Provide in-services to help teachers and parents understand
auditory processing problems;
- Allow a "buddy system" that the child can use to
check homework assignments or other instructions;
- Consider the use of tape recorders for some children who
need a repetition of directions, spelling words, or lectures;
- Ask teachers to provide pre-printed lecture notes or
outlines to minimize the need to listen and write or take notes. This allows the child to
listen while watching the teacher and taking advantage of all visual cues.
Any remediation program should be directed
not only at arranging for the management of the child but also should recognize the
childs responsibility in his/her own remediation. When the child learns to take care
of his/her own needs through better organization, asking for repetition, double checking
assignments, and other self-help behaviors, he/she will experience more academic success
and develop a better self-image.
© Parent-Child Services Group,
Inc. 5/97
Lynne F. Harmon, M.A., CCC-SLP
Permission to copy for educational purposes