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Mr Mellow likes yellow....but what about red, orange, green and blue, and all the other colours too? Can his quirky animal crew persuade bright, bimodal* Mr Mellow that there's more to like than just yellow? *Mr Mellow is deaf; to help him to hear, he wears a hearing aid on one ear and a cochlear implant on the other! Mr Mellow really is a cool dude - dressed all in yellow and ready for a raucous adventure with his colourful animal crew. With each page turn, the story builds, each time adding a new colour, a new creature, a new twist to the tale... and culminating in a celebratory feast of…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Mr Mellow likes yellow....but what about red, orange, green and blue, and all the other colours too? Can his quirky animal crew persuade bright, bimodal* Mr Mellow that there's more to like than just yellow? *Mr Mellow is deaf; to help him to hear, he wears a hearing aid on one ear and a cochlear implant on the other! Mr Mellow really is a cool dude - dressed all in yellow and ready for a raucous adventure with his colourful animal crew. With each page turn, the story builds, each time adding a new colour, a new creature, a new twist to the tale... and culminating in a celebratory feast of colour! This is an inclusive children's book starring a character who happens to be deaf, but is not specifically about hearing loss. Mr Mellow Likes Yellow is an exuberant tale about a funny and flamboyant fellow (who has a white kite that he flies at night, while balancing on his bed that is rich ruby-red) and his fantastical animal friends. The book will get kids laughing while reciting along with the rhyming verse, as it builds from page to page. The book allows children who use assistive hearing technology to see themselves represented (through the totally fabulous Mr Mellow) and shows everyone, whether they have hearing loss or not, that wearing hearing aids and/or cochlear implants is really very cool indeed! For those parents and therapists who wish to use it as a speech and language development resource, the book integrates listening and spoken language (LSL) strategies, which the author employed when teaching her own daughter (who is profoundly deaf and aided by cochlear implants) to listen and speak. These strategies include: Audition before vision: New characters and new colours are described in words on the page before we actually see them, allowing the child's brain to process the auditory information prior to the visual information. Talking ahead - what comes next? As the book introduces new colours and new characters one by one, the reader and the child can have great fun guessing and discussing which colour and which character might be revealed next. Practicing auditory closure: Structured as a poem which repeats and builds as the pages turn, the book offers multiple opportunities to practice auditory closure (when the reader pauses and allows the child to fill in the next word or phrase). Strengthening auditory memory: Children will naturally want to join in with reciting the poem as it repeats and builds throughout the book. The reader can pause periodically to allow the child to recite as much as they can from memory. Expansion of vocabulary: This book is a celebration of colour... but it doesn't just utilise the most common names for the most common colours. It encourages children to expand their descriptive vocabulary to include different names for different colours, as well as describing the properties of different colours and what they represent. Developing emotional intelligence and theory of mind: A central concept woven into the book is the exploration of preferences: different people (or animals in this case!) like different things - in the book, this is expressed through different characters liking different colours for different reasons. This can open up wonderful discussions with children about their own preferences, why they have these preferences and why different people might not always feel the same way they do - and why that's okay! Written by Tanya Saunders (creator of Ling Ling Bird) and illustrated by the irrepressibly colourful artist, Lorena Villegas-Cid.
Autorenporträt
Tanya Saunders is a writer, artist and lover of wild places. The road that eventually led to her founding AVID Language and writing books for deaf children started unexpectedly back in 2016. Tanya and her husband Ian were living and working in a remote corner of the African wilderness (where Tanya had grown up with elephants literally on her doorstep) when their life was suddenly turned upside down overnight. One of their two year old twin daughters was diagnosed with profound bilateral sensorineural hearing loss and auditory neuropathy spectrum disorder (ANSD). In other words, she was completely deaf in both ears and there was no chance of her natural hearing ever getting any better. Tanya and Ian were advised that there was only one way that their daughter might one day be able to learn to listen and speak: she would need to get cochlear implants and embark on an intensive programme of speech and language therapy. Without hesitation, Tanya and Ian made the decision to do whatever was necessary to give both their daughters the best chance possible for a happy and fulfilling future. This included uprooting their family from their beloved home, moving continents and changing careers. Tanya and her family are now happily settled in the UK, feeling fortunate to be surrounded by an incredible support network and with access to some of the best medical and scientific expertise the world has to offer.Motivated by her own family's journey with hearing loss (which is a long road, and one on which they are still traveling), Tanya founded AVID Language to publish books for deaf children, as well as for their parents, carers, teachers and friends whose support is so critical to their success in learning to listen and speak. Tanya believes that deaf children are currently underrepresented in books, and this gap needs to be filled for the sake of all the children out there in the world today who are growing up with some degree of hearing loss. She believes that deaf children deserve the same opportunities in life as everyone else; it is not for us to set limits on what they can achieve but rather to give them the platform they need to learn, grow, and attain their goals as equals alongside their hearing peers. Tanya wants AVID Language books to inspire deaf children to dream big, while acknowledging the hard work it takes to learn to listen and speak.Tanya is a Parent Ambassador for Auditory Verbal UK (AVUK), an aspirational organisation that delivers listening and spoken language early intervention programmes for deaf children with cochlear implants and/or hearing aids. The auditory verbal strategies and techniques that Tanya learned while her daughter was on the AVUK programme guide Tanya's writing today, alongside the wealth of knowledge she has gained from numerous other professionals, friends and family members who, as a team, continue to support her daughter and have made truly transformative contributions to her odyssey into the hearing and speaking world.Although not a professional therapist herself, as a 'parent practitioner' of auditory verbal therapy traveling this road alongside her daughter, Tanya's personal experience and observations can provide helpful insights for other families on the same path. Her vibrantly illustrated stories encourage deaf children to reach for the stars and reassure them that, while it may not be easy, all the hard work involved in learning to listen and speak will be worth it in the end.Tanya discusses parenting a deaf child, writing and publishing in her HearSay blog on the AVID Language website.