Developmental Disorders
Developmental Disorders
CDS 460
Communication: BROAD concept of the exchange of meaning between a sender and receiver
- body language, spoken, silence, pictures, eye gaze, gestures, texting, talking,
self-expression, driving, presenting, emails, etc.
Language: Set of symbols and knowledge of how to use these symbols (sign, written, pictures,
electronics)
Form (rules): syntax (grammar), morphology (word formation), phonology (sound formation),
suprasegmentals (loudness, rate, and intonation)
Pragmatics (use): rules vary by culture, situational context within which utterances are made,
knowledge and beliefs of the speaker & the relation between speaker & listener
Childhood LD
● differential diagnosis
- parsing out hypotheses to identify diagnoses
● special ed
Early LD (birth-5)
● assessing early LD
School-age LD (5-21)
● new demands
● school-age assessment
Language Impairment
SELD + time = Specific language impairment (SLI)
● Preschool age and early school age (4-7)
- Distinguish from linguistic differences
● Info processing
● Cog. difficulties
- Part B:
- Significant delay in one or more developmental areas
- 1.5 SD below or more below the mean
Assessment
- Qualification for special education services
Assessment
Informal assessment
● Interview with family and other care providers
● Language/communication sampling
- contexts
- parent-child intervention (birth-3)
- play sample (preschool)
- purposes
Standardized
● Questionnaires: non-comparative snapshot of skill(s)
- Ex: MacArthur Communicative Development Inventories (16-30 months)
● Criterion-Referenced Test: compare against particular milestones and skills at a
particular age range
- Ex: Rossetti (birth-3)
● Norm Referenced: comparative test to sampled norm (be weary: who was sampled?) at
a particular age range
- Ex: School Language Scale-5 (PSL-5) (birth-7;11) or Clinical Evaluation of
Language Fundamentals-Preschool 3 (3-6;11)
Content:
● vocabulary knowledge
● retrieval of words
Use:
Formal Assessment & Functional Assessment
● Social/conversational
● Engagement in class
● Teachers; one on one interactions
● making predictions
● inferring
● answering cause/effect
● important aspects
Literal interpretation- EX: what did the bear last eat? berries
Sequential: what did the bear do after he swam across the river? after, suddenly, yesterday
Inferrencing: what happened to the forest? the fire burned, no food, running around. what do
you think the bear is going to do with the acorn? vocab, what bears eat, presume that bears eat
these things.
Running inference-
Language demand of holding onto language and changing lines of thinking, constant storage
and retrieval
Background knowledge needed- accumulation or teacher
Metalinguistic skills
Metaphorical language
Children with reading problems read less than proficient readers and read less challenging text
Matthew effects
LD: assessment
Emergent literacy
Morphological components
Rhyming words
Sounding out
Preliteracy
Literacy skills
Decoding
Blending
Sight words
Reading comp
Spelling
Segmenting
Writing composition
Standardized assessments
CELF-5
CASL-2
Multilingual learners?
- Sequential vs simultaneous
Intervention- EI
● Natural environment; routines,
● Focus on family support and coaching
Components
Positively reinforce any communication attempt; positive behavior support (PBS)
Environmental arrangement- changing incremental details, working with kids flexibility(what
might be successful if changed?)
Responsive interaction- any attempt at language is met with a response which maintains
communication
Milieu teaching (MT) - set of strategies that use child’s natural environment to encourage
communication skills; follow child’s lead, narration, expansion
ex: child likes balls, child says b-, clinician- ball, yes ball-big ball-throw ball, give choice of two
balls, place ball out of reach
Focused stimulation; intentional usage and emphasis of language
NCI
Form
Content
Use
Narrative production
Metalinguistics
Metaphorical
Sentence comprehension and processing
Story/passage comprehension
Narrative intervention
Fluency Disorders
Dysfluency: speech behavior that disrupts the fluent forward flow of speech; alters from normal
amt of dysfluency at the age
Characterized with:
Sounds repeated
Sound prolongations
Interjections- adding sounds to get out of moment where stuck
Words broken by pauses -> sounds in middle of words more indicative of disfluency disorder
Pauses in speech
Word substitutions to avoid problematic words- anticipation of dysfluency word
Excess physical tension- body tension
Social anxiety, academics stress, aggravation of dysfluency when presented with stress
Developmental Stuttering
Emerges 2-5 years
Normal disfluency; trial and error, play, exploring, risk, attempts, making leaps in language
learning, hold your own in a conversation when learning language- may produce normal
stuttering
Parents concerned during this age -> is stuttering rlly developmental disfluency?
Have sentences gotten longer, using bigger words in the past few months? -> if yes, likely
normal disfluency
Secondary Behaviors
tend to accompany core behaviors
-> purpose: escape or avoidance, strategies to get around stuttering
different levels of severity
-> escape: physically pulling self out of block; eyes closed, flaring nostrils, tensing lips, tensing
jaws, tensing of vocal cords, tensing chest, clicks, nodding
Psychogenic stuttering
Cluttering
video examples
Kate
small block on my
block lu-pause-luhhh
luhhh prolongation
insertion of sounds
inhalations
fleeting secondary behavior
blinking of eyes
Daniel
part word repetitions se-se-seven, i-iiiii
prolongations iiiiii
head movement
jaw movement, tension
longer core and secondary behavior
looking up
neck tension
6 repetitions
predisposing factors
family history /genetic disposition
gender; males more
neuroanatomical differences
motor speech coordination
precipitating factors
age
stressful adult speech models
stressful speaking situation
self awareness/temperament
empowering/normalization
creating safe spaces
integrated approach
not just strategies to not stutter
assessing fluency
case history/interview
speech observation
questionnaire/survey
direct testing
quantifiable
+ quality of life
Kiddy cat questionnaire
appropriate language
TOCS -
single words
Intervention
modification; managing the moment of stuttering
shaping: creating less disfluent speech
Already experiencing core behavior moments; techniques to aid and decrease secondary
behaviors
- cancellations and pull-outs to modify disfluencies
- reduce escape and avoidance behaviors
- reduce fear and anxiety
Pull-out technique:
- slowly reduce tension in the moment
- pseudostuttering
Cancelation:
- pause
- think about where tension is
- reduce tension
- say word again
Easy onset:
- starting airflow before vocal cords
Light contact:
- touch articulations lightly
- when the light contact occurs depends on analyze what’s going on with the client
Client agency: I don't want to talk slow, I don't want to sound like that
Loose vs tense; What does the body feel like to be tense? Where do you feel loose? Where do
you feel tense? Imbed counseling
SLP: demonstrates various features of the treatment, observing parent going the treatment
feedback
Articulation disorders
- Phonetic level
- Organic etiology
- neurological (dysarthria, apraxia, cerebral palsy)
- physical abnormalities (cleft palate, lip, muscle tone)
- deficits of motor learning
- Give families an expectation of sound production
- Functional, no known cause, 80% of cases, maybe genetic component, trends in family
Characterized by:
Omissions- seep instead of sleep
Substitutions- easier sound, sweep instead of sleep
Additions- less common, throw in extra sound
Distortions- lisp-y sounds
2 years- p, h, n, b, k
3 years- m, w, g, f, d
4 years- t, “sh”, j, (“y”)
5 years- s, v, “ng”, r, l, “ch”, z
6 years- “th”
7 years- consonant blends and clusters “spr” “str”
Dentition- Kids lose teeth -> consider, determines what sounds are realistic
Ex: No F sounds if top teeth are lost to tooth fairy, palate expansion impacts art.
Oral Mechanism- assess how things move and structure of the mouth, full range of motion?
purse lips? move tongue up in and out?
Non speech tasks- No adjacent practice of working ex: eating muscles
Phonological disorders
breakdowns in perception and production of phonological rules of a language (form)
cognitive-linguistic
- widespread patterns of errors
- deletion of consonants at end of words (final consonant deletion)
- dropping whole sounds and syllables
- limited speech sound repertoire
- limited syllable structures
- trouble with multisyllabic words
- interactions of sounds and syllable structures
Omissions/Deletions:
Probably -> pobably
School -> cool, sool
Mushroom -> muroom, mushroo, mush, ushroom
Additions:
Spider -> skpider
Mushroom -> Mushuhroom
Substitutions:
Spider -> Spiduh
Distortions:
Lateral lisps- air escapes out of side
Nasality- making sound not nasal, nasal
Frontal lisps- thamwitch
Multilingual learners- sounds errors that are not present in native language
Consider dialects
Intelligence
How much repetition is needed?
Screening
Compare against developmental norms
Cue fading-
Cue + model -> model
K sound peace sign to throat cue
Cold -> Told & Cookies -> Tookies
Phonological pattern of fronting?
One sound targeted at a time, in specific position of a word (finale, medial, final)
progress to next sound at ~80% accuracy
~75 repetitions
Adjusting of cueing to improve accuracy
60% accuracy with visual & tactile cues -> work on fading cues
Multiple cues + modeling
Cut down on cueing
Phrases/ formulaic sentences
“Interesting sentence” = sentences with more phonetic context
Phonological Therapy
Minimal pair / contrast approach
Feedback of utilization of pattern
Bow-Boat, Owe-Oat
Use pictures
Perception and production tasks
Point at which one is said
Student becomes teacher and slp points to what is said
Metaphonological Approach
Simultaneous targets
Suppression of speech error patterns
Ex: fronting k -> t
Phoneme awareness
Ex: fishing for objects and say first sound/recognize first sound
Letter-sound correspondences; literacy component
Ex: tat vs cat, still working on fronting but also phonemic awareness and production
Assistive Tech-
Aids for daily living
Communication aids
Environmental controls
Prosthetic and orthotic devices
Sensory aid
Seating and positioning
Mobility and transportation aid
AAC
Visual pieces, size, colors, contrast
Cognitive representation
Aided? Unaided
Types of Symbols
Acoustic; ex: verbal cue on AAC
Graphic; images
Manual; ex: sign, modified sign
Tactile; ex: brail
Variations?
What are goals for the future? Independence? How can communication intervention & specific
communication methods work toward this goal?
Aided (electronic system, low tech cards/sheet) vs unaided system (gestures, signs)
Electronic or non electronic
High tech, low tech, no tech
Display- fixed (static) or dynamic
Time delays?
High contrast?
System match language development?
Ex:
Tech-speak
Sign language
Eye gaze system considerations- no trunk support, hand movements, head stability, time delay?
.