In 1993, the first study of outcomes of auditory-verbal graduates was published in the Journal of the American Academy of Audiology (JAAA). The stated purpose of the research at that time "was to document the status of graduates of one aural habilitation option; auditory-verbal" (p. 190, Goldberg & Flexer). A follow-up study was published in 2001, also in JAAA, and findings of both studies revealed that the majority of the participants were integrated into regular/typical learning and living environments. The latter study suggested that the early fitting of sensory aids and cochlear implant technology, coupled with family-focused early intervention emphasizing auditory learning, helped to provide for even greater independence and community participation of these later graduates. Now, over 25 years after the initial auditory-verbal graduate study, this current research project replicates and provides an update of graduates of auditory-verbal teaching from around the world. (Participants in the earlier studies were solely from the United States and Canada.) Results from over 200 graduates continue to reinforce the positive outcomes reported in the earlier studies.