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Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

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Speech and Speech and Language Language Development Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP
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Page 1: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Speech and Language Language

DevelopmentDevelopment

Speech and Speech and Language Language

DevelopmentDevelopmentVielka Scott, MS CCC-SLPVielka Scott, MS CCC-SLPJanice Brown, MS CF-SLPJanice Brown, MS CF-SLP

Page 2: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Language

DevelopmentCommunication is the exchange of

information through various verbal or nonverbal actions.

• Verbal Communication • Nonverbal communication

• Total communication

Page 3: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Language

Development•Verbal Communication – achieved thru

spoken words and language; maybe accompanied by culturally appropriate normal gestures and facial expressions

•Nonverbal communication – achieved without oral speech; maybe in the form of signs, gestures, facial expressions, and symbols.

•Total communication – achieved thru the simultaneous use of verbal expressions as well as sign language.

Page 4: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Language

DevelopmentPhonology:

The study of speech sounds, their patterns and sequences and the rules that dictate sound combinations to create words.

Page 5: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Language

DevelopmentFluency: the aspect of speech production

that refers to the continuity, smoothness, rate, and/or effort with which phonologic, lexical, morphologic, and/or syntactic language units are spoken.

Page 6: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Language

DevelopmentSemantics – the study of meaning

in a language

Syntax- the study of sentence structure

Morphology – the study of word structure

Page 7: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Language

DevelopmentPragmatics: The study of social use of language

and the rules of such language.

It means using language appropriately in social situations

Page 8: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Language

Development

Language Difference vs

Language Disorder

Page 9: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech and Language

Development

Communicative Intent

Page 10: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Frequency of occurrence

Sound Frequency

Sound Frequency

Sound Frequency

/t/ 1st or 2nd

/th/ 8th or 9th

/b/ 18th

/n/ 1st or 2nd

/k/ 10th /y/ 18th

/r/ 3rd or 4th

/w/ 11th /v/ 19th or 21st

/s/ 3rd or 4th

/h/ 12th or13th

/th/ 20th or 21st

/l/ 4th or 9th /f/ 15th or 16th

/sh/ 20th or 21st

/d/ 5th or 6th /g/ 15th or 19th

/j/ 22nd

/m/ 6th or 8th

/p/ 16th /ch/ 23rd

/z/ 7th /ng/ 17th /er/ 24th

Page 11: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Speech IntelligibilityHow intelligible is your child’s speech

to a stranger during his early years? There is a broad range of normal, but typically a child at…

• 19 to 24 months of age is 25% to 50% intelligible • 2 to 3 years, the child is 50% to 75% intelligible • 3 to 4 years, the child is 80% intelligible• 4 to 5 years, the child is 90% to 100% intelligible

Page 12: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Sounds AGE CHILDREN BEGIN USING THE SOUND

AGE 90% OF CHILDREN ARE USING

THE SOUND

/p/, /m/, /h/, /n/, /w/

< 2 years 3 years

/b/ 2 years 4 years

/k/, /g/, /d/ 2 years 4 years

/t/, /ng/ 2 years 6 years

/f/ ,/y/ 2 years 6 months 4 years

/l/ 3 years 6 years

Articulation Development

Page 13: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Articulation Development

Sounds AGE CHILDREN BEGIN USING THE SOUND

AGE 90% OF CHILDREN ARE USING

THE SOUND

/r/, /s/ 3 years 8 years

/ch/, /sh/ 3 years 6 months

7 years

/z/ 3 years 6 months

8 years

/j/ 4 years 7 years

/v/ 4 years 8 years

/th/ 4 years 6 months

8 years

/zh/ 6 years < 8 years

Page 14: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Language Development

Vocabulary Development • Depends heavily on environmental

exposure as well as the individual capacity each child brings to the learning situation

• Grows rapidly to around 2,000 words by his or her fifth birthday

Page 15: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Words, Words, Words• English is a morpho-phonemic language

(both meaning and sound)• English has a deep structure• English has the largest vocabulary in

the world (750,000)• English has many nuances, similar word

meanings, synonyms, and words borrowed from other languages

Page 16: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Four Types of Vocabulary

ListeningSpeakingReadingWriting

Page 17: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Words, Words, and More Words

• Children begin first grade with a 6,000 spoken word vocabulary

• Children learn 36,000 more words by 12th grade (spoken language)

• Children learn 5 words a day• Children still need 55,000 words for

printed school English (Chall, 87; Gunning, 04)

Page 18: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Language Development

2.5 – 3 years

• Syntax-morphology: – Child uses word combinations, has beginning phrase and sentence

structure; – Combines 3-4 words in subject-verb-object format; e.g., “Daddy throw

ball.”• Semantics:

– Comprehension usually precedes production– Expressive vocabulary is 200 – 600 words– Meanings seem to be learned in sequence: objects, events, actions,

adjectives, adverbs, spatial concepts, temporal (time) concepts• Pragmatics:

– Child’s utterances, although occasionally egocentric, generally have a communicative intent

– Interpersonal communication expands; the child learns to adopt a role to express his own opinions and personality

Page 19: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Language Development

3 – 4 years• Syntax-morphology:

– The child uses mostly complete sentences; at 48 months, sentences average 5- 5 ½ words per utterance. MLU is approximately 3 – 5 words.

– uses simple (regular) plural forms correctly – e.g., boys, houses, lights

• Semantics:– Comprehends up to 4200 words by 42 months– Uses 800 – 1500 words expressively– Labels most things in the environment

• Pragmatics:– Child maintains conversation without losing track of topic– Child uses communicative functions such as protests (Don’t touch

that!, Don’t want that!)

Page 20: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Language Development

4 – 5 years• Syntax-morphology:

– Child speaks in complete sentences– Child uses comparisons

• Semantics:– Child uses concrete meanings and words but sometimes responds

to abstract ideas appropriately– Uses how and why– Can name items in a category

• Pragmatics:– Child modifies speech as a function of listener age (beginning at 4

years)– Child can maintain topic over successive utterances

Page 21: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Language Development

5 – 6 years• Syntax-morphology:

– Child increases understanding and use of complex sentences; decreases grammatical errors as sentences and vocabulary become more sophisticated

– Child uses all pronouns consistently• Semantics:

– Child defines objects by use – Child know functions of body parts– Child tells long stories

• Pragmatics:– Child can recognize a socially offensive message and reword it in

a polite form– Child modifies speech according to listeners needs

Page 22: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Does the Child’sEnvironment Play a Part?

Environmental situations…

oral stimulationvocabulary developmentlanguage deprivation

Page 23: Speech and Language Development Vielka Scott, MS CCC-SLP Janice Brown, MS CF-SLP.

Facilitating language enriched classroom

environment?• Have students repeat directions orally (sequentially)• Require students to respond in complete sentences.• Redirect focus with repetition of same stimulus statement/question• Combine oral and written (visual and auditory) presentation of

materials to reinforce structure• Calls child’s name, touch shoulder, and/or whisper to regain

attention of child who appears to be distracted.• Practice sound and symbol association drills consistently to

facilitate appropriate sound production• Give children alternative vocabulary – use multiple words to

express one concept• Teach vocabulary explicitly• Have children define words based on concept• Redirect children who exhibit behavior problems


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