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Childhood Apraxia of Speech

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Childhood Apraxia of Speech. Information from the Conference by: Margaret Fish MS,CCC-SLP. Definition of Childhood Apraxia of Speech. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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CHILDHOOD APRAXIA OF SPEECH Information from the Conference by: Margaret Fish MS,CCC-SLP
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Page 1: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

CHILDHOOD APRAXIA OF SPEECHInformation from the Conference by:Margaret Fish MS,CCC-SLP

Page 2: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

DEFINITION OF CHILDHOOD APRAXIA OF SPEECH “A neurological childhood speech sound

disorder in which the precision and consistency of movements underlying speech are impaired in the absence of a neuromuscular deficit (e.g., abnormal reflexes, abnormal tone).”

In simple terms it is a disorder of motor planning.

Page 3: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

CHARACTERISTICS Inconsistent errors in production of

consonants and vowels with repeated productions of syllables and words.

Lengthened and disrupted co-articulatory transitions between sounds and syllables

Inappropriate prosody (not always, sometimes their prosody is the best thing they have going for them)

Connected speech more unintelligible than expected given phoneme repertoire of results of single-word articulation test.

Page 4: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

CHARACTERISTICS (CONTINUED) Limited vocalizations/babbling during infancy.

(“very easy baby, was so quite”) Automatic speech (counting, singing, etc)

better than volitional productions. Groping or silent posturing Regression (loss of sounds and words) Poor diadochokinetic rates (pa-ta-ka),

accuracy, and rhythm. Difficulty producing volitional oral

movements Possible feeding difficulties during infancy

(unrelated to significant muscle tone weakness)

Page 5: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

CHARACTERISTICS (CONTINUED) Receptive language (typically) exceeds

expressive language Late in attaining first words At risk for literacy difficulty

Page 6: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF MOTOR SPEECH EXAM Provide opportunities for child to:

Produce words imitatively and spontaneously Produce words with increasingly complex syllable

shapes Repeat test items 3-4 times (not necessarily

sequentially) Execute non-vocal oral movements Produce phrases and sentences Produce challenging words with the benefit of

cueing (visual/tactile/proprioceptive)

Page 7: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

FORMAL ASSESMENT INSTRUMENTS KSPT- Kaufman Speech Praxis Test for

Children (Kaufman) VMPAC- Verbal Motor Production Assessment

for Children (Hayden and Square) The Apraxia Profile (Hickman)

Page 8: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

TREATMENT CONSIDERATIONS Focus on Phoneme Sequencing Provide Opportunities for repetitive practice Provide the appropriate intensity of service Select vocabulary thoughtfully (functional

vocabulary) Incorporate multisensory cues and feedback Focus on vowels Address prosody early on in treatment Incorporate phonetic modifications as

necessary Move quickly to phrases and sentences Facilitate carryover

Page 9: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

MOTOR LEARNING THEORY When teaching new movement patterns

mass practice is recommended. (Hi mom, hi mom, hi mom)

When trying to habituate skills, distributed practice is recommended. (I got ball, give me, roll down, got it)

Page 10: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

INCREASING PRACTICE OPPORTUNITES Divide activities into three phases

Set-up the activity Complete the activity Review the activity

(mailman activity example)

Page 11: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

MATERIALS AND ACTIVITIES TO PROMOTE REPEATED PRACTICE Echo microphone Puzzles Sound Puzzles String beads or pop beads Fisher Price Farm Fisher Price cash register Cars, trucks and ramps Train track and trains Mr. Potato Head Marble works Books and songs

Page 12: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

MATERIALS AND ACTIVITIES TO PROMOTE REPEATED PRACTICE Books and songs (The big book of

exclamations) Bubbles Zoo animals Playdough and accessories Wind up toys Games (my turn, your turn, #’s, colors, teach

vocabulary so they can play with friends) Familiar characters with accessories Dollhouse with family characters

Page 13: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

QUICK GAMES FOR REPETITIVE PRACTICE Pop-up pirate Cariboo Crocodile dentist Don’t spill the beans Silly six pins Lego creator Mousetrap Animal buddies Barnyard bingo Lucky ducks

Milk and cookies Silly faces Colorforms Memory games Lotto games Holiday and seasonal

game boards (super duper)

Page 14: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

ACTIVITIES FOR CHILDREN WHO ENJOY MOVEMENTS Bowling Basketball Long jump: put pictures of words on floor and

jump over them. Add a new word each time. (“ I jumped over a ____”, “ I jumped over a ___and ___and ____)

Picture hop Treasure hunt Mailman

Page 15: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

ACTIVITIES FOR CREATIVE CHILDREN Block designs Tall tower Dominoes Stickers Progressive drawing (guess what I’m

drawing) Earn it now-make it later crafts

Page 16: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

MISCELLANEOUS ACTIVITIES Go fish Memory Simon says Louder/softer (say word louder or softer) Hidden puzzle pieces (hide under target

words)

Page 17: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

INTENSITY OF SERVICE Motor learning research suggests that motor

skills are: Acquired more quickly Attained more accurately And are better retainedWith shorter, more frequent

sessions

***She said in a perfect world a minimum of 3-5, 20-30 minute sessions a week is ideal.***

Page 18: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

MULTISENSORY CUEING Specific cueing techniques

Rate variations Choral speaking (simultaneous production) Direct or delayed imitation Mirror Mime (take away your voice) Hand motions/positions (Pam’s place on youtube) Written letters and words Tapping/clapping out syllables Syllable manipulatives Sound names Phoneme placement cues Mouth pictures

Page 19: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

PAM’S PLACE- VOWELS (FIND ON YOUTUBE)

Page 20: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

VISUAL SYLLABLE WORDS

Toe May Toe

Page 21: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

moo Vee

Page 22: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

GIVE A LOT OF FEEDBACK When teaching a NEW motor skill:

Provide frequent feedback Provide immediate feedback Provide knowledge of performance

Tell what was not correct about the movement Tell what should be done differently next time

*Limit the amount of information provided- don’t overload*

Page 23: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

FEEDBACK CONTINUED Progressively fade extrinsic feedback Provide intermittent reinforcement and

feedback Begin to provide extrinsic feedback in form of

knowledge of results (was the target correct or incorrect)

Begin to delay feedback as skill level increases

Page 24: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

PHONETIC MODIFICATIONS Four ways to modify targets: 1. Choose simpler words

“Nana” for grandma “Uh huh” for yes2. Teach alternate articulatory placement (e.g. dental

placement for alveolors)3. Consider normal phonological patterns (Kaufman) Syllable reduction, reduplication, cluster reduction,

final consonant deletion, liquid gliding, or vowelization

4. Vowel simplification (e.g. pure vowels for dipthongs)• This gives children power and a function vocabulary• Honoring the modifications increases vocabulary

Page 25: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

KAUFMAN’S SUCCESSIVE APPROXIMATIONS “Day no” “di no” “di no so” “di no saur”

Page 26: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

FACILITATION GENERALIZATION Increase practice opportunities Increase flexibility by using many phoneme

contexts Reduce cueing Increase rate Reduce pausing between syllables/words Change feedback from descriptive

(knowledge of performance) to correct/incorrect (knowledge of result)

Choose functional vocabulary Enlist help of family/teachers

Page 27: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

EXTRA INFO THAT I THOUGHT WAS COOL BUT DIDN’T REALLY PERTAIN TO APRAXIA MUCH… Teach children to ask appropriate follow-up

questions discretely: Use question cue cards Limited choices of cue cards

“I’m feeling kind of sad today”

Where? Why?

Page 28: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

CONVERSATIONS Integrating the three basic conversation

extenders through discrete practice: What type of conversation extender is the

student predominantly using? Who is doing the most talking?

Use chipper chat tokens, each person has their own color. Put token on card when they do it.

Ask a question

Make a comment

Tell something about you

or someone you know

Page 29: Childhood  Apraxia  of Speech

THE CONVERSATION TRAIN Colored strips or small trains, one color for

each person in the conversation Lay strips side by side for each

conversational turn Include “talk over” or interruption strip Include “off topic” card

Talk over card

Off topic card


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