ntaucom duke univcusity mc6icM ccnteR VOLUME 23, NUMBER 33 AUGUST 20,1976 DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA Children Learn To Listen, Then To Speak Acoustic Nursery Helps Hearing'lmpaired By Ina Fried The little girl's back is to the door. As the teacher calls her name from the doorway, she (juickly turns around. Responding to the sound of her name is probably an everyday reaction for most children. But for a hearing-impaiied child, it's a major accomplishment. Kven with hearing aids, the children in the Acoustic Nursery lack normal hearing. I'hey must strain to use whatever residual hearing they have. The nursery, which is part of the Speech and Hearing Disorders Program, is sup})orted by the medical center and donations from private groups. It serves hearing-impaired children up to four years of age and their j)arcnts. Home-Centered Approach rhe focuS of the program is a homc-ccntered, parent-guided, natural approach to language learning, Ci a r o 1 \V i 1 s o n , coordinator-teachcr of the nursery, explained. The nuisery is divided into two parts, the Parent-Infant Training Program, which serves the recently diagnosed child and parent, and the Acoustic Nursery, which provides a ni () re s t r u c t u r e d 1 e a r n i n g enviromnent for the child. "I encoinage parents to see themselves as the child's natinal teachei's, and I give them tools to work with in teaching," explained Susan McNair, coiniselor-tutor of the Parent-Infant I l aining Program. Counseling and Support In a home-like setting. Mis. "COME OUT, CLOWN!"—Leslie Funderburk, 2, sees that the clown pops up when Susan McNair (center) calls him. At the Parent-Infant Training Center of the Acoustic Nursery, Mrs. McNair demonstrates how parents like Mrs. Leonard Funderburk Goldsboro can use toys to encourage hearing-impaired children like Leslie to use their voices. (Photo by Thad Sparks) .McNair first provides coimseling and suppoi t for the parents, who have to face the fact that their child's hearing is impaired, and who may have feelings of guilt or frustration. (Continued on page 3) Six Faculty Members Named In Medical Center Promotions Physical Therapy Chairman Heads National Association 1 he chairman ot the Department of Physical Therapy has been elected president of the American Physical Therapy Association. ROBERT C. BARTLETT Rol)ert C;. Bartlett was chosen to head the 26,0 0 0 -m e m b e r organization at its annual meeting in New Orleans. The association is the primary representative of phvsical therapists in the United States with chapters in every state. It helps the federal government formulate national policy relating to physical therapy. Bartlett came to Duke earlier this year from the State L'nivei sity of New V'ork's Downstate Medical ('enter, where he was professor and chairman of the Program in Physical Therapy. He previously had worked at the New York University Medical (Center as well as the UnitecI C^ereln al Palsy Association of New York State. A graduate of Springfield (Mass.) Ciollege, he earned a certificate in physical tiierapy at New York University's Jkhool of Kducation in 1957 and a master's degree in physical tliej apy there in 1959. Six promotions on the medical tenter faculty ha\e been announced by Provost Trelei ic N. Cleaveland. Dr. Wesley A. Cook Jr., 40, was promoted to asscKiate professor of neurosurgery. He is a native of Tiesno, Ualif., and received his medical degree at the University of Oregon Medical School in 1963. He came here as an intern in 1963 and later spent two years at the University of Pisa. Italy, on a special postdocMJral fellow-ship from the National Institutes of Health. Dr. Stuart Handwerger, 37, was promoted to assKiate professor of pediatiics. .A native of Baltimore, Md., he received his M.D. at the L niversitx of .Maryland School of Medicine. He came to Duke in 1971 from Harvard Medical School, w here he was a fellow in endocrinology and a teaching fellow in medicine. He was ap|)ointed as chief of the pediatric endocrine division and will continue to serve in that capacity and as assistant professor of physiology and l)harmacology. Dr. Gerald A. Serwer, 30, has been named assistant professor of pediatrics. He is a native of Oklahoma and received his medical tlegree from Duke in 1972. He remained here as an intern, resident and fellow in pediatric cardiology. Dr. J. Bolling Sullivan, 36, was jjromoted to associate professor of biochemistry. A native of Rome, Ga., he received his Ph.D. at the University of Texas at Austin in 1966. He came here that year as a National Institutes of Health postdoctoral fellow. Nancy F. Woods, 29, was promoted to asscKiate professor of nursing. The Kau Claire, Wis., native is a gracUiate of Wisconsin State and earned her master's degree in nursing at the University of Washington in 1969. A Duke faculty member for the past four years, she has studied biostatistics and environmental sciences at the University of North Carolina and currently is working toward a dcKtorate in epidemiology. Karen K. Yoder, 29, was named assistant professor of nursing. A native of Ciarnett, Kan., she was an instructor at Parkview Methodist Sch(M)l of Nursing, Fort Wayne, Ind., foi* two years before she received her .Master of Nursing degree at Emory University in 1973. She came here in 1974 as an instructor in the School of Nursing.