2007
Awarded $1,500
Jeff Hoffman
Health Program Manager
Nebraska Newborn Hearing Screening Program
Lincoln, Nebraska
Jeff Hoffman is honored for his instrumental role in managing the successful Nebraska Early Hearing Detection and Intervention Program. In 2000, just 16% of the birthing hospitals in Nebraska were conducting targeted or universal newborn hearing screening and just 36% of newborns were receiving hearing screening during birth admission. Today, 100% of the birthing hospitals have programs, and 99.4% of all newborn babies in Nebraska receive hearing screening during birth admission. Almost half of all the newborns receive both otoacoustic emissions and auditory brainstem response assessments. The ASHFoundation commends Mr. Hoffman for his expert coordination of data and services, for raising awareness of the program’s importance, for implementing critical follow up for families with infants who have hearing impairment, and for expanding clinical education opportunities for state audiologists.
2006
Awarded $1,500
Deborah Hwa-Froelich
Deborah Hwa-Froelich is honored for creating and coordinating the Saint Louis University International Adoption Clinic. One of the few developmental adoption clinics in the nation, this interdisciplinary setting is designed to assess the needs of children and their families in the areas of adoption adjustment, child communication, symbolic play, and social-emotional development. The collaborative team offers intervention services in both speech and language treatment and child/family counseling, and provides annual follow-up testing to monitor future development progress. The clinic is an outgrowth of Froelich's longitudinal research documenting the acquisition of English during the first 12 months post-adoption, and she continues to collect data and feedback on the assessment protocol. The ASHFoundation commends this clinical pioneer for addressing the lack of research and comparison models with this population and for taking a socio-communicative view that ultimately will help to ensure best practices for internationally adopted children and their families.
2005
Awarded $1,500
Janet A. Norris, PhD
Janet A. Norris is honored for developing an innovative intervention approach for visual language learning that teaches phonemic and print awareness as a natural part of reading. Children who have difficulty learning through traditional methods are experiencing success with this evidence-based approach called Phonics Faces. The method enables them to learn the meaning of letters by attaching the visual form of the letter to the visual mouth position used to make the sound. This work has been disseminated to practitioners at local, national and international levels, has led to funded grants from the Louisiana Department of Education, and has had special impact on public school reading programs in the southeastern region of Louisiana. The Foundation commends Dr. Norris for her research and intervention protocols used to address a critical need in language and literacy development for prekindergarten to third grade children who do not receive special education services in the schools.
2004
Awarded $1,500
Teresa Ann Cherry-Cruz
Teresa Cherry-Cruz is honored for her efforts as founder, fundraiser, and director of the T.O.T.A.L Program: Teaching Others to Achieve Literacy. This annual summer camp program serves children and adolescents from the inner-city community of Bridgeport who are judged to be at risk in the areas of language and reading. Activities in the program blend individual and group instruction in oral language, phonological awareness, reading and writing, with structured recreational activities in a highly motivational context. Started in partnership with a local church, the program engages an all-volunteer staff of speech-language pathologists, parents, regular and special educators, high school and college interns funded through AmeriCorps, and graduate interns from the communication disorders program at Southern Connecticut State University. With 200 children now participating annually, Ms. Cruz is commended for establishing an innovative urban service delivery program that is an exemplary prototype for replication in other communities.
2003
Awarded $1,500
Kathy Privratsky
Kathy Privratsky is honored for her efforts to promote and provide assistive technology to students with special needs throughout the challenging environment of remote regions of Alaska. She is specifically cited for co-founding the Assistive Technology Library of Alaska (ATLA), a service that makes equipment available on a short- or long-term loan basis to any individual in Alaska. The ATLA has served 909 patrons/students. All 53 school districts of Alaska plus numerous local and state organizations borrow from this library, and data reveal that 2,022 items were checked out of the library during fiscal year 2003. Traveling by plane to rural areas, Privratsky has directly provided evaluation, training, and consultation services to 10 school districts and obtained state grants to ensure that assistive technology and augmentative communication devices opened the door to communication for previously underserved students with special needs.
2002
Awarded $1,500
Carol Hustedde
Carol Hustedde is honored for her humanitarian outreach to provide hearing services to unserved or underserved Vietnamese children with hearing impairment. When the founder of the Lexington Speech & Hearing Center brought this pressing need to her attention, Dr. Hustedde took the lead in organizing a 12-day intervention trip. Over a year's time and many obstacles, she identified the Saigon Children's Charity as an appropriate collaborating agency, developed a project budget, and sought funding. Her determination to find resources to support the trip resulted in three grant submissions before a donor was found and acquisition of numerous hearing aid devices to bring to Vietnam. In addition to testing children and fitting hearing aids, she also provided training for teachers and the children's parents. She has been responsible for opening the doors for ongoing hearing aid service to children in Vietnam and for providing current information on educational management of these children to their educators.
2001
Awarded $1,500
Charlotte Ducote
Charlotte Ducote is honored for her efforts to establish the first comprehensive speech pathology services in Vietnam, a country of 78 million people who previously had little or no access to services. In 1998 she co-founded Operation Smile’s Speech Therapy-Vietnam Project, a not-for-profit, non-governmental agency which provides reconstructive surgery and related care to indigent children and adults in developing countries and in the United States. She mastered the Vietnamese language and developed an articulation screening tool, handouts, protocols, and other materials for the Vietnamese population. She has been responsible for advancing the knowledge and skills of medical and allied health professionals in the north, south and central regions of the country, for educating the public, and for obtaining equipment and funding.
2000
Awarded $1,500
Sandra Tattershall
Sandra Tattershall, director of Language and Learning Center in Florence, Kentucky, has developed an effective and collaborative Reading and Listening Comprehension course for students with academic language difficulties. Her adaptation of this theory-based course has enabled fourth- and fifth-grade students to improve language processing strategies before they experience academic failure associated with increasing language expectations of middle school.
1999
Awarded $1,500
Emily M. Homer
Emily Homer is recognized for her instrumental role in developing a new school-based Dysphagia Team, officially known as the Swallowing Action Team (SWAT). This model program for dysphagia assessment and intervention was developed to assure safe nutrition and hydration for students at risk for swallowing dysfunction during school hours. Through the SWAT program, organized training sessions have allowed related professionals in the area of dysphagia to gain further knowledge and skills in therapy and management of the disorder. The Foundation honors Ms. Homer for her innovation and persistence in developing a team which assures that children will achieve optimal development and academic gains.
1998
Awarded $1,500
Gretchen M. Spring
Gretchen Spring was the first speech-language pathologist in the state of Arkansas to conduct laryngectomy rehabilitation using telemedicine technology. The use of this innovative service delivery model has allowed patients who live in rural and remote parts of the state to access rehabilitation services. It has also allowed speech-language pathologists throughout the state to advance their clinical skills in this area of expertise under her supervision.
The Foundation commends Ms. Spring for her vision and initiative in addressing unmet needs and underserved areas through the use of telemedicine technology. She has subsequently become the "master clinician" for rehabilitation with head and neck cancer patients in Arkansas. Her pioneering efforts served as a springboard for an $868,000 grant proposal funded this year by the Health Resources and Service Administration's Office of Rural Health Policy.