OPINION
A jury convicted appellant, Salathiel Ashley Green, of two counts of aggravated sexual assault of a child and assessed punishment at forty years’ confinement in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division for each offense. See Tex. Pen.Code Ann. § 22.021 (Vernon Supp.2005). Appellant appeals his conviction in six issues. We affirm.
Factual and PROCEDURAL Background
Appellant taught a three-year-old daycare class at Children’s World Learning Center. Two unrelated children in appellant’s class, C.B. and S.H., independently accused appellant of improperly touching them. The parents of C.B. and S.H. notified the Center of their children’s allegations on separate days without knowledge of the other allegation.
C.B. was fully toilet trained by the age of two and a half, but she began wetting herself a few months after entering appellant’s class. She only wet herself while at school. When the wetting became excessive, C.B.’s mother took C.B. to a doctor. C.B. told the doctor “Brady” was scaring her at school, and she identified Brady as “Mr. Sal,” the children’s name for appellant. C.B. also told the doctor appellant touched her “butt” but pointed to her vaginal area, appellant used his finger, and it happened in the bathroom. When on the stand, C.B. testified this also happened while the class took them nap and the other children were asleep. C.B.’s mother waited a day to call the daycare because *892 she did not want to make an inappropriate allegation. Appellant was suspended pending an investigation.
Appellant occasionally babysat for S.H. in her home, and appellant attended S.H.’s birthday party. Two days before S.H.’s party, appellant brought S.H. her birthday presents, which consisted of four outfits, shoes, a watch, a Power Puff Girls toy, a pencil box with a picture of appellant and S.H., and a needlepoint. At her party, S.H. showed her gifts to her friends. When S.H.’s father saw the presents, he thought they were excessive and became concerned over appellant’s demeanor. He told S.H.’s mother to have a good touch / bad touch conversation with S.H. and gave her direction on how to have that conversation without suggesting to S.H. what their concerns might be. When S.H. and her mother had that conversation, S.H. told her mother that “Mr. Sal” whispered in her ear, kissed her, and sang songs to her. S.H. also said appellant touched her chest and “rana,” a term they use in their home for the female genitalia. S.H.’s mother called the Center the next day and learned appellant was not on vacation, as he had told them, but he was suspended due to the allegation previously made by another child, which was C.B.
During trial, the jury heard testimony from S.H. and C.B., their parents, their doctors, and various representatives of the Children’s Assessment Center. Appellant also testified and denied touching either girl inappropriately. He testified if he had touched them inappropriately, it must have been an accident when he picked them up. Because appellant testified it may have been an accident, the State brought forth two rebuttal witnesses who testified about two other children who made allegations against appellant. One child made the allegation prior to C.B., and one child made the allegation after the Center sent a generic letter home to parents, not naming appellant or the charges against him. The jury found appellant guilty of both counts of aggravated sexual assault, and after hearing punishment evidence, it assessed punishment at forty years’ confinement for each cause.
Discussion
I. Limitation of Voir Dire
In his first issue, appellant contends the trial court erred when it restricted his trial counsel’s voir dire. Specifically, appellant’s trial counsel asked the venire panel, “In an appropriate case, a sexual assault of a minor, say the age range is two to four to five years old, and there’s a conviction of sexual assault, can you consider probation?” Appellant’s trial counsel later said, “we are not talking about 17-year-olds.” The trial court sustained the prosecutor’s objections to the question and statement. Appellant contends the inquiries were proper because they sought to explore facts that could give rise to a challenge for cause.
The trial court has broad discretion over the process of selecting a jury.
Barajas v. State,
Appellant cites
Lee v. State,
in support of the proposition that the age of the victim in an indecency with a child case is an essential fact necessary for explaining a hypothetical and appropriately challenging a venire member for cause.
The State cites
Barajas v. State
in support of the proposition that consideration of a victim’s age improperly commits venire members to assess or refrain from assessing punishment.
II. Ineffective Assistance of Counsel
In issues two, three, four, and six, appellant claims ineffective assistance of trial counsel. The United States Supreme Court established a two-prong test
*894
to determine whether counsel is ineffective.
Strickland v. Washington,
In appellant’s ineffective assistance of counsel claims, he contends his trial counsel failed to object on four occasions: (1) when a lay witness gave expert opinion testimony; (2) when one complainant’s mother testified about an inadmissible outcry of her daughter; (3) when one complainant’s mother gave victim impact testimony during the guilt/innocence phase; and (4) when one expert witness gave inadmissible hearsay testimony. For appellant to succeed on these claims, he must demonstrate the trial court would have erred in overruling the objection if trial counsel had objected.
Vaughn v. State,
Any allegation of ineffectiveness must be firmly founded in the record, and the record must affirmatively demonstrate the alleged ineffectiveness.
Bone v. State,
Here, appellant filed a motion for new trial and raised ineffective assistance of counsel as one issue, and in the hearing on that motion, appellant’s two trial attorneys testified about several topics, mostly cen *895 tering around trial preparation. At no time during this hearing did appellant’s trial attorneys testify about their motivations for not objecting on these four particular occasions. During the hearing on the motion for new trial, the trial judge told appellant’s appellate counsel he had ten minutes remaining and could supplement the record with an affidavit, but no affidavit appears in the record before this court.
In the vast majority of cases, the undeveloped record on direct appeal will be insufficient for an appellant to satisfy the dual prongs of
Strickland
because the reasonableness of counsel’s choices often involve facts not appearing in the appellate record.
Rylander v. State,
III. Hearsay Testimony
In his fifth issue, appellant contends the trial court erred in admitting hearsay testimony of Dr. Margaret McNeese. Dr. McNeese is the medical director at the Children’s Assessment Center, which investigates allegations of sexual abuse, and she testified she examined S.H. for signs of sexual abuse for the purpose of medical diagnosis and treatment. During the interview portion of the examination, S.H. told Dr. McNeese that Mr. Sal touched S.H. and told S.H. not to tell. S.H. also pointed to her own vagina when Dr. McNeese asked S.H. where she had been touched. Appellant obtained a running objection to this entire testimony.
An appellate court will reverse a trial court’s decision to admit evidence only for an abuse of discretion.
Ho v. State,
Statements by a suspected victim of child abuse about the cause and source of the child’s injuries are admissible under an exception to the rule against hearsay pursuant to Texas Rules of Evidence 803(4). Tex.R. Evid. 803(4);
Gregory v. State,
In young children, the presumption of reliability that forms the basis of the hearsay exception may break down if the child does not understand the importance of being truthful.
Beheler v. State,
This evidence is sufficient to support a finding that S.H. understood the need to be truthful. We hold the testimony by Dr. McNeese meets the requirements of hearsay exception 803(4) and the trial court did not abuse its discretion in admitting this testimony. Therefore, we overrule appellant’s fifth issue.
CoNclusion
Having considered and overruled each of appellants six issues on appeal, we affirm the judgment of the trial court.
Notes
. The second question in Barajas is almost identical to the question asked by appellant’s counsel during voir dire: "In an appropriate case, sexual assault of a minor, say the age range is two to four to five years old, and there’s a conviction of sexual assault, can you consider probation?”
. Additionally, the
Barajas
court referred to its holding in
Standefer
when noting parties may not ask whether venire members can consider probation under particular facts of a case beyond the offenses charged in the indictment.
Barajas v. State,
