| |
Disorder vs. Delay
The order in which children learn speech sounds and language forms
is fairly predictable. Most children follow the same pattern of development.
When a child is developing skills in this order but is doing it more
slowly, he/she has a speech/language delay. Sometimes child does not
have the same speech or language skills as other children his/her age
and is not just slow in developing. They have gaps in development -
they may have some skills that are age-appropriate but are missing some
that should have been learned when they were younger. They may use some
sounds or forms that are unusual and never used by any child at any
age. This is considered a disorder.
Developmental Language Disorder/Delay
Children who do not develop language skills appropriately are language
delayed or disordered. There are many potential causes for language
delays/disorders in children, including hearing impairment, cognitive
impairment, autism, physical handicap that prevents the child from interacting
with their environment, and lack of stimulation. Often, there is no
identifiable cause for a language disorder.
Children can have receptive language impairments, expressive language
impairments or both. Some children do "catch up" to their
peers but many continue to have difficulty and the gap between their
skill level and that of their peers may increase over time. As there
are multiple factors affecting outcome, it is hard to predict who will
"recover" or how great the gains will be. Language disorders
are changeable; at different stages of development children have different
demands on their language systems. Children with language impairment
in the preschool years may appear to catch up to peers by age 5 or 6
years, but then in later years when demands change and children begin
to learn to read difficulties become apparent.
Receptive language impairments mean that a child has difficulty understanding
language. They may have a limited vocabulary. They may not understand
the meaning of word endings: that adding "s" makes a noun
plural, or "'s" indicates possession, or that an "ed"
ending on a verb means that the action is past. They may have difficulty
understanding nonverbal signals, like body language. They may not understand
sarcasm, or indirect requests (e.g., "it's cold in here" can
mean "please close the window").
Expressive language impairments show up in how a child speaks. They
may use only a few words in each sentence. They may leave off word endings,
or the little words like "is" and "are". They may
not know the names of many words.
Continued on Next Column
|
Language therapy focuses on working with families to create an optimal
environment for learning language.
They may not always use language appropriately and appear to be rude
by being too direct or blunt. They might not consider their partner's
needs, using ambiguous referents (lots of "he", "she"
and "it" when the subject has not been clearly identified),
or changing topics abruptly.
Language therapy with preschoolers often focuses on working with families
to create an optimal environment for learning language. The Hanen Centre
in Toronto has developed an excellent program for helping families of
children with language impairments. Their principles are widely used.
As adults, we tend to do most of the talking when we are communicating
with children. We're better at it, so why not? Think of a conversation
you may have had with someone who did all the talking? Did you enjoy
it? Did you feel they were hogging the floor? Did you get a chance to
have your say, to talk about what you thought? This is how many children
feel when speaking with adults. A child who appears to have nothing
to say, may have lots to say but just doesn't get a chance. They may
be communicating in other ways, not just speech. We need to look for
the clues, the signals they send that show they are communicating then
help them build on them. Have you every spoken with someone who uses
big words, long complicated sentences? You have trouble understanding
and keeping up and eventually give up and even tune out. This is how
children respond when the language they are hearing is too far above
their level. Remember that receptive language is usually slightly ahead
of expressive language. If a child is speaking in 2 word utterances,
he/she is probably able to fully understand 3 word utterances.
These are general suggestions for communicating with language impaired
children. They also apply to all children.
Be at the same physical level. Get face to face.
Follow the child's lead. Let them choose the "topic".
Take turns. The child's turn may be a non-verbal one. Give them a chance
to be an equal partner.
Use language that is at or slightly above their level. This provides
them with models that they can try to imitate.
Expand what they say to show that you have understood and value what
they've said and to provide them with a model of a more mature form.
For example, child: "eating", adult "yes, he's eating";
child "dog", adult "big dog".
Where Can I Get Additional Information?
Tustin Speech & Language Center
661 West First Street, Suite E
Tustin, CA 92780
Phone: (714)-838-2853
Info@TustinSpeech.com
Top of Page
|
Information Source ...
|
| |
The Speech and Language Pathology
Website
http://home.ica.net/
~fred/index.htm
Leslie Styba, B.Sc. Hons.,
B. A., M.Cl.Sc
Speech-Language Pathologist,
Reg CASLPO
Featuring:
Developmental Language Disorder/Delay |
|
Tustin Speech & Language Center |
| If you
would like more information, or you would like to schedule
a free consultation, please do not hesitate to call ...
(714) 838-2853 |
|
|