CSD 440 - EXAM 2
Early warning signs
* Dislike for shared book reading, nursery rhymes, etc. * Difficulty following directions * Difficulty learning letter names * Inability to recognize or identify letters in the child's own name
Writing
* Need executive functioning skills * Story organizers * Intervention might focus on specific skills or metaskills
Improving reading fluency
* Practice with the same book * Track the words with your finger * Start with easy books
Late First Grade/2nd Grade - Reading
* Read and retell familiar stories * Sounds words out * Identifies some sight words
Recommendations to parents to aid reading skills
* Read books with your child * Talk to your child and name objects in their environment * Talk about what you are doing during daily routines * Point out print in your everyday environment * Sing and rhyme with your child * Encourage your child to draw, scribble, etc. * Take turns telling stories
Reading Fluency
* The ability to read text accurately, quickly and with proper expression * Bridge between word recognition and comprehension
SLI - Associated Problems
- reading skills (problems with detecting, segmenting, and blending) - problems learning to read - problems with nonword repetition tasks (nonsense words)
SLI - Pragmatics/Language Use
- use language for same purposes as typical children - less initiation, more replies - communication problems may have secondary impact on social skills
Late Talkers
- Delay in productive language abilities (18-23 months less than 10 words; 24 months less than 50 words; few two-word combos) -No signs of other developmental delays
Differing Pathways to Birth to Three Services
- Diagnosed Condition (ie Down syndrome) - Developmental Delay (ie Late talker) - Atypical Development (ie ASD)
IFSP Functional Outcomes in Intervention
- Identify opportunities for practice - Map onto routine or activity - Determine if there is a need to arrange and/or restructure environment? - Describe the antecedent event to elicit response - Describe those behaviors needed to meet outcome - Specify the consequences for child following behavior - Develop a schedule matrix with visual reminder of outcomes
SLI Intervention - Facilitation Around Books and Play
- comment about child's interests - ask questions related to child's interests - respond to child utterances by adding a little more info
IFSP Child Goals examples
- communication - motor - cognitive - behavior
SLI Intervention - Peer Mediated (Young Children)
- identify problem behavior - teach appropriate behavior - support practice
SLI Intervention - Sentence Combining
- improve ability to use complex grammar - shows how words can be put into varying patterns - school-age to college students - improves writing skills
SLI - Phonology
- intelligibility difficulties - interact with other aspects of language
IFSP Family Goals examples
- interaction with child - learning sign language - promoting a skill
IFSP routines and activities should be...
- interesting - comfortable for caregiver - quick to complete - joint attention - interesting materials - repetition opportunities
SLI - Semantics/Language Content
- late onset of early productive vocabulary - overuse certain verbs - same ORDER of development as TD children - restricted, concrete knowledge - overextend and underextend (generalization issues) - problems with naming pictures of common objects - problems with abstract concepts - restricted vocabulary
SLI Intervention - Hanen Early Language Parent Program
- milieu teaching and naturalistic language facilitation
SLI Intervention - Hanen Early Language Parent Program Results
- more frequent and longer parent-child interaction - parents: slowed rate, less complexity, and use of facilitation strategies, lowered stress - children: more joint attention and increases in vocab
SLI Biological Factors
- neurological - genetic
Prerequisites for reading
- print knowledge - phonological awareness - writing - oral language -emergent writing
Curriculum-based assessment
-Assesses language skills of the student as it considers academic content and social interaction demands of curriculum -Identify knowledge and language required to succeed academically -Identify instructional modifications to enhance success -Results in meaningful intervention goals -Requires close collaboration between the SLP and classroom teacher
Evaluation B-3: Communication Protocol
-Hearing ability and hearing history -History of speech-language development -Expressive and receptive language performance (syntax, morphology, semantics, pragmatics, phonology) -Speech -Oral-motor functioning and feeding history -Voice (quality, pitch and loudness) -Fluency
Principle 9
Avoid telegraphic speech, always present targets in well formed phrases and sentences; children may be extracting forms from what is heard and comprehension may exceed production
Principle 1
Basic goals of grammar treatment is to help the child achieve greater competence in a variety of functional settings and usages
Mid-Kindergarten/Mid-First Grade- Writing
Basic words can be read by others Writes names Writes basic sentences
Three basic processes of writing
1. planning what to say 2. translating into written form 3. reviewing and editing *requires metaskills and executive function skills
Prevalence of Late Talkers
13.4-19% Predictive Factors: suggests neurobiological & genetic mechanisms that operate across maternal and family characteristics (not yet possible to use as screening factors)
Parent-child interaction assessment
Aligned with social interaction theory Children use complex language in familiar routines Identifies parent's scaffolding strategies Child's play may reveal level of cognitive development Documents target behaviors and the antecedent events and reinforcement
Principle 1 usages
Conversational speech, telling a story (oral or written)
Evaluation vs Assessment for B-3
Evaluation: determine eligibility based on developmental status: cognition, communication, physical, adaptive/self-help, or social-emotional Assessment: follows determination of eligibility; determine child and family's needs, strengths and early intervention services
Morphological Awareness Approach
Explicitly teach part of words (prefix, suffix, root) Important for reading fluency, comprehension and spelling
Intervention for older children
Help the child be successful in classes Work on literacy through a variety of subjects Push in and pull out
Principle 1 settings
Home, school
Assessment for children with SLI
In depth LSA Norm-referenced Criterion-referenced/naturalistic assessments (ie parent-child interaction assessment and curriculum-based assessment)
Enhancing Language & Communication in Infants and Toddlers
Family-centered care Parental Partnerships Individual Family Service Plan Evidence-based practice
Methods to achieve functional outcomes
Direct: professional as an agent for change Indirect: professional assists others to be agents of change
Intelligibility Issues
Lack of normative data Variability in performance Multiple influencing factors Separating speech from language Oral motor work and affect on speech
Principle 7
Manipulate discourse so that targets are more salient in appropriate contexts; salient or word final position
Principle 5
Manipulate social, physical, and linguistic context to create frequent opportunities for a grammatical target
Principle 4 focus
Partially mastered forms first and then proceed to unused forms; only target forms if cognitively and functionally ready for use
National Reading Panel Domains
Phonological Awareness Fluency Reading Comprehension
Spelling skills needed
Phonological awareness Morphological awareness Visual storage Orthographic knowledge
Early Intervention targets for reading
Phonological awareness Print concepts Alphabetic awareness Oral Language skills
Preschool reading
Print carries meaning Pretend to read books Actively participate in shared book reading routines Handle books appropriately
SLI associated problems
Problems with interactive communication Phonological impairment Processing Difficulty- Memory (STM) 59% also diagnosed with ADHD 80% have reading problems Writing and spelling also poses challenges
SLI social communication: 3 treatment paradigms
Social interaction with peers Peer confederate training Sociodramatic play
Late PK/ Mid K reading
Recognizes names Can name many letters Know some letter sounds Can identify where to start reading and in which direction to read
Principle 3
Select intermediate goals to stimulate child's language acquisition process and not to teach all specific language forms; select goals for a system-wide change
SLI Definition
Significant language learning difficulties - no impairment of: nonverbal cognition, social-emotional development, hearing, neurological or oral structure, or oral motor abnormalities
Collaboration with parents
Increase caregiver's awareness of the child's communication acts (ie behavior regulation, joint attention, social interaction) Encourage appropriate responses to communication behaviors (select appropriate targets, set up hierarchies)
Three components of a narrative
Initiating event- problem that sets story in motion Attempt- action undertaken by a character to solve problem Consequence- what happened?
Principle 6
Use different genres and written modality to develop appropriate contexts for specific treatment targets; the transfer from conversation to other forms is not automatic, obligatory context is not always the easiest in conversations (more past tense in stories)
Principle 10
Use elicited imitation to make target more salient and to give child practice with targets that are difficult to produce; use functional context; make the child repeat you of what you want to happen, make it happen, make child repeat you saying what happened
Principle 4
Specific goals should be based on the child's readiness and need for form
Explicit approach
Structured Adult-directed Specific targets (may include letter identification, sound blending, story maps)
Principle 3 focus
Subject-verb agreement could lead to the addition of other required markings
Generally, treatment should focus on...
direct work on the language elements (no evidence to focus on potential "underlying" causes)
Facilitate Functional Outcomes (where)
natural environment during child-initiated actions, routines, and planned activities
Narrative microstructure
necessary syntax and internal linguistic features
Narrative macrostructure
overall story organization
Surface theory/ missing feature hypothesis
children don't perceive the morphological features produced with less stress and lower intensity
Alphabet Awareness
children's understanding of letter names
Most Deficient Area in SLI (Form, Content, OR Use?)
form
Extended optional infinitive theory
get "stuck" in a stage were tense is considered optional
Facilitate Functional Outcomes (how)
identify naturally occurring routines and preferred planned activities
Facilitate Functional Outcomes (when)
throughout the day as the child in involved with ongoing routines and activities
Print Concepts
understanding print carries meaning
Phonological Awareness
word and syllable awareness, rhyme, phonemic awareness
Intervention: Writing
• Targeting specific foundation skill: Spelling, punctuation and syntax • Targeting metaskills and executive function: Story organizers, evaluative rubrics
Intervention: Reading comprehension
• Teaching metaskills • Make predictions and form questions prior to reading • Answer the questions as they read • Look up words • Summarize paragraph by paragraph • Graphic organizers, visual diagrams
Late First Grade/2nd Grade - Writing
• Writes phrases that others can read • Uses the "writing process" • Uses punctuation • Monitors writing
Intelligibility rough guidelines
18 months- 25% 24 months- 50-75% 36 months- 75-100%
Birth to Three Program Steps
1. Referral 2. Evaluation by a team 3. Eligibility criteria 4. Assessment 5. IFSP 6. Transition
What age are SLI principles best used for?
3-8 years old
SLI prevalence
7% 3:1 ratio male to female
Oral Language Development
Narrative: monologue describing real or fictional event that has specific linguistic features Should have clear structure by age 6
Embedded Approach
Naturalistic Set up environment to promote literacy development (ie storybook reading, "sign in" at beginning of class
The fluency four
Punctuation Accuracy Right Rate Expression
Literacy and Hearing impairment
• 50% of deaf students graduate from high school with a 4th grade or lower reading level • 30% leave school functionally illiterate • Literacy can also be affected in children with less severe hearing loss
Intervention: Spelling
• Focus on student's deficits • PA, orthographic knowledge, morphological skills, visual storage • PA deficit = most common cause for poor spelling • Practice identifying incorrect and correctly spelled words • Word sorts
Literacy and Intellectual Disability
• It's a myth that children with ID will not be able to learn to read • Interventionists need to incorporate preliteracy into interventions • Skills may develop differently
RBI Disadvantages
- B-3 program level: reimbursement and time - conflicting expectations - geographic and scheduling barriers - distractions - clinician discomfort - unpredictability
SLI Environment Factors
- NOT THE CAUSE - require more intense and focused stimulation to become language proficient - parent-child communication patterns should be monitored and sometimes modified to foster language
SLI - Syntax and Morphology
- deficiencies in grammar - short, less syntactically complex utterances - errors and omissions - difficulty with verb inflections - look at differences between SAE and AAE - same ORDER of development as TD children
SLI Intervention - Peer Mediated (School-Age Students)
- encourage understanding of others emotions - practice established social routines - use and understand "hidden communication"
RBI Advantages
- frequent practice - natural consequences (NOT BAD) - parents are effective implementers - natural element - cultural responsiveness
IFSP General Information
-Develop goals and functional outcomes (child and family) - Determine strategies and who will implement them - Facilitate functional outcomes in natural environments
Evaluation B-3: Team's clinical opinion supported by:
-Review of records/existing data -Developmental history -Observations-natural settings -Administer norm or criterion-referenced instruments
SLP role in the NICU
Adapt environment Monitor infant behavior Encourage, inform & empower caregivers (ie non-nutritive sucking and feeding; reading signals-alertness, state)
Principle 2
Grammar should rarely be the only target of language treatment; children with SLI have multiple areas of concern that should be treated as well (phonology, vocabulary, social interaction)
Preschool writing
Start scribbling Use letter-like forms Control a writing tool
Reading Comprehension
Starts at 3rd grade Vocabulary development, narrative ability, use of metastrategies during the reading process Use graphic organizers and visual diagrams
Late PK/ Mid K writing
Syllabic writing Some conventional letters Chooses their own "words"
Principle 8
Systematically contrast forms used by child with adult forms by used recast
SLI - More Receptive or Expressive Problems?
expressive
Range of Language abilities
typical- late bloomer- late talker- SLI
Mid-Kindergarten/Mid-First Grade- Reading
• Recognizes all letter names and most letter sounds • Can identify where word begins and ends in a sentence • Knows capital from lowercase letters