Speech-Language Impairments - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Speech-Language Impairments

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More often than not, our students, especially students on the Autism Spectrum have difficulty in this area. Some of the characteristics may include: 1. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Speech-Language Impairments


1
Speech-Language Impairments
  • Tricia Hansen
  • Oklahoma State Department of Education
  • Instruction and Related Services Specialist

2
Introduction to Speech Or Language Impairments
  • The King's Speech
  • Marshmallow Activity
  • Sentence Activity
  • Grocery List Activity

3
Incidence
  • More than one million students who receive
    special education services under IDEA in public
    schools are served under that category of speech
    or language impairments.
  • Because many disabilities do impact the
    individuals ability to communicate, the actual
    incidence of children with SLI is much higher.

4
Causes for Speech Or Language Impairments (SLI)
  • Hearing Loss
  • Neurological Disorders
  • Muscular Disorders
  • Developmental Delays
  • Brain Injury
  • Mental Retardation
  • Autism
  • Cerebral Palsy
  • Drug Abuse
  • Vocal Abuse or Misuse
  • Physical Impairments (ex. Cleft Palate)

5
Symptoms and Signs of SLI
  • Interruptions in the flow or rhythm of speech
    such as stuttering
  • Articulation or phonological disorders
  • Improper use of words and their meanings
  • Inability to express idea
  • Reduced vocabulary
  • Inadequate social skills
  • Difficulties with vocabulary, site words,
    decoding, and comprehension
  • Difficulty writing down thoughts
  • Difficulties with abstract ideas
  • Fluency impairments

6
Signs of SLI
  • Signs of SLI

7
Definition of Speech or Language Impairment (SLI)
  • The Individuals with Disabilities Education Act
    defines an SLI
  • As a communication disorder, such as stuttering,
    impaired articulation, language impairments, or a
    voice impairment, that adversely affects a
    childs educational performance.

8
Types of Speech-Language Disorders
  • Types of Speech Disorders Refers to difficulties
    producing speech sounds or problems with voice
    quality.
  • Articulation
  • Speech impairments where the child produces
    sounds incorrectly (ex. Lisp, difficulty with l
    or r.)
  • Fluency
  • Speech impairment where a childs flow of speech
    is disrupted by sounds, syllables, and words that
    are repeated, prolonged, or avoided and where
    there may be silent blocks or inappropriate
    inhalation, exhalation, or phonation patterns.
  • Voice
  • Speech impairment where the childs voice has an
    abnormal quality to its pitch, resonance, or
    loudness.

9
Speech Disorders
  • sessions

10
Types of Language Disorders
  • Types of Language Disorders Refer to impairments
    in the ability to understand and/or use words in
    context, both verbally, and nonverbally.
  • Expressive Difficulty in expressing ideas or
    needs.
  • Receptive Difficulty in understanding what
    others are saying.
  • Mixed Involves a mix of expressive and receptive
    difficulties.

11
Expressive
  • Sarah Scott
  • Sariah

12
Real Life Application Expressive
  • Fourth-grader Elliott stays in his schools
    Extended Day program after school. When his
    mother picked him up one afternoon, he told her,
    Im glad you finally came. I was the last one
    here. Elliotts mother looked around the room
    and counted ten other children. Eventually, after
    much questioning, she ascertained that Elliott
    meant, I was the last of the fourth-graders
    here.
  • The next day, Elliotts class was excited because
    the schools principal promised to visit them
    with an undisclosed treat from having the best
    attendance in the building. Elliotts teacher
    sent him to the office with this message, Ask
    the principal when she is coming to our
    classroom. Elliot went to the office but
    conveyed the slightly altered message, My
    teacher wants to know if you can come to our
    classroom. Based on his message, the principal
    thought that there was a problem and hurried to
    the classroom, only to find that a
    miscommunication had occurred.

13
Elliott
  • Elliotts scenario included two examples of
    consistent expressive-language mistakes.
  • What were they?
  • Have you ever known someone with similar
    expressive-language challenges?
  • Is there anything you could recommend to his
    teacher or mother to help prevent similar
    communication breakdowns in the future?

14
Real Life Application
  • Twelve-year-old Briana was excited about the
    swimming pool that her grandparents were putting
    in their backyard. As she began to explain to her
    friends what it would look like, she said, Its
    shaped like a . and then paused, unable to
    recall the word that described its shape.
  • After a few seconds, she continued, Its shaped
    like a circle, but the sides are longer.
  • You mean an oval? teased one of her friends.
  • Briana laughed, embarrassed, and replied Yep,
    thats exactly what I mean.
  • Later that day, Briana found out that shed
    failed a science test made up of twenty
    fill-in-the blank questions. Briana was
    frustrated because she knew the content well. Her
    teacher decided to give her an alternate test--
    one in which Briana could use a Word Bank to
    answer the same twenty questions. Because she was
    able to recognize and select the correct answer,
    rather than recall the word herself, Briana got
    an A on the test.

15
Briana
  • Brianas scenario included two examples of a
    consistent expressive-language disorder. What is
    it? How was she able to work around her inability
    to recall the word oval?
  • What ideas or suggestions can you suggest that
    Brianas teacher implement to support her during
    class discussions? During test-taking?

16
Expressive Language Strategies
  • Create opportunities for the child to interact
    with peers.
  • Pair children to share stories of what they did
    on the weekend and have them report it to the
    class (accept all child responses).
  • Model full sentence responses when 11.
  • Create a safe environment for all students.
  • Build a word wall.
  • Allow time for the child to process the question
    and formulate an answer.
  • Ask questions beginning with wh-words (who, when,
    why) rather than yes/no questions.
  • Model sentences by repeating the childs message
    in a correct form
  • Prompt the child to use expressive language
    strategies and skills following the specific
    recommendations of the Speech Language
    Pathologist (SLP).
  • Prompt answers by giving choices (what it x or
    was it y?)
  • Add to the childs message by paraphrasing and
    expanding on it. (ex. Its cold, or Cold air
    is coming in because the window is open.)

17
Receptive Language
  • Receptive Language refers to our ability to
    receive information. This may cause great
    frustration.
  • Students with language disorders may struggle
    with
  • Understanding what is spoken to them
  • Comprehending what they read
  • May have difficulty with
  • Complicated sentence structure (simple v.
    complex)
  • Unfamiliar vocabulary

18
Real Life Application Receptive
  • Maddie reads the following passage from The Witch
    of Blackbird Pond (8th Grade)
  • Sailors began vigorously to roll out the great
    casks of molasses and pile them along the wharf.
    Two of the men lowered over the side the seven
    small leather trunks that held all of Kits
    belongings and piled them, one beside the other
    on the wet planking. Kit clambered down the
    ladder and stood for the second time on the alien
    shore that was to be her home.
  • Her heart sank. This was Wethersfield! Just a
    narrow sandy stretch of shoreline, a few piles
    sunk in the river with rough planking for a
    platform. Out of the mist jutted a row of
    cavernous wooden structures that must be
    warehouses, and beyond that the dense, dripping
    green of fields and woods. No town, not a house,
    only a few men and boys and two yapping dogs who
    had come to meet the boat. With something like
    panic Kit watched Goodwife Cruff descent the
    ladder and stride ahead of her husband along the
    wharf. Prudence, dragging at her mothers hand,
    gazed back imploringly as they passed.

19
Maddie
  • This passage is confusing to Maddie for several
    reasons
  • She doesnt know what the bolded words mean,
    decreasing her reading comprehension.
  • She mistakes the word piles in the second
    paragraph for the word piled in the first, and
    imagines something being piled in the river, but
    wonders, Piles of what?
  • She associates the term alien with science
    fiction and beings from outer space, resulting in
    a misinterpretation of that sentence.
  • Some of the phrasing confuses her.
  • Example She thought the phrase, Two of the men
    lowered over the side means that two men were
    lowered over the side.

20
Maddie
  • What can you do as a teacher to help students
    with language disorders comprehend the material
    and avoid confusion?

21
Practical Life Application
  • Myrons teacher asks him to help her put some
    photographs of leaves on a bulletin board. The
    pictures are part of a learning center in which
    the students will have to look at the photos and
    identify key characteristics. Myrons teacher
    tells him, I wouldnt put the photos up so high
    that students cant view them easily. He
    teachers choice of words confuses Myron he
    isnt sure whether he is or is not supposed to
    put the photos up high, and whether the students
    should or should not be able to view them easily.

22
Myron
  • Why do you think Myron was confused by his
    teachers instructions?
  • Can you come up with 2-3 instructions that would
    be similarly confusing?
  • Restate those 2-3 statements, as well as that of
    Myrons teacher, to be more easily understood.

23
Receptive Language Strategies
  • Signal the teacher when directions have not been
    understood
  • Ask for Repetition of directions
  • Ask for clarification of directions
  • Sit close to the teacher and white board
  • Sit in a quiet place
  • Pre-teach specific vocabulary
  • Build a word wall
  • Review previously learned material
  • Connect new vocabulary or information with that
    previously learned
  • Use direct requests (Please close the window,
    instead of Its cold in here)
  • Give directions in a time-ordered sequence
    (first, then, etc)
  • Pair directions with gestures or visual cues
  • Reduce visual distractions
  • Gain students attention before giving directions
    or instructions
  • Use a phrase or visual prompt before giving
    directions or instruction
  • Speak clearly
  • Stress key words in a sentence
  • Provide additional response time
  • Avoid asking the child to listen and write
    simultaneously

24
Pragmatic Language Disorders
  • Pragmatic Language refers to the appropriate use
    of language in social contexts.
  • Students with language disorders may have trouble
    with language-based social interactions.
  • Characteristics may include
  • Difficulty interacting with peers and/or adults
  • Violates conversational rules
  • Has limited eye contact
  • Interrupts frequently
  • Makes odd, irrelevant comments
  • Violates personal space
  • Inability to interpret and use non-verbal cues
  • Dominates conversation
  • Has poor topic maintenance

25
Pragmatic Language Strategies
  • Practice appropriate body language.
  • Make facial expressions and ask students to tell
    you how they think you feel (mad, happy)
  • Teach conversational skills in the classroom
  • Components of conversational skills
  • Turn-taking
  • Recognizing and responding to a topic
  • Ensuring clarity of your part of the conversation
  • Requesting clarification
  • Topic transitions and time factors
  • Terminating a topic

26
Pragmatic Language Strategies
  • Strategies for Teaching Conversational Skills
  • Start with short conversations on one topic.
  • Provide additional cues if the student does not
    respond (gestures, clarification)
  • Provide the student with time to process
    information when beginning a conversation.
  • Keep the conversation going by asking questions.
  • Keep from asking yes/no questions.
  • Encourage the student to listen to others as they
    speak.

27
Real Life Application
  • Two six-year-olds are playing a game on the
    playground when a third child approaches them and
    says, That looks fun! and is invited to join
    the game. A fourth child also asks, Can I play?
    and, once given approval, joins the game.
    However, through six-year-old Lela likewise wants
    to join the game, she is uncertain how to
    approach the others to initiate an interaction.
    She wanders around the general vicinity where the
    children are playing, approaches them several
    times, but walks away without saying anything.
    Finally, she joins in the game without asking.
    Although the others let her play, they are
    uncomfortable because she did not follow the
    normal social conventions.

28
Lela
  • What should Lela have done in order to join the
    girls game?
  • What pragmatics skills does she need to develop?

29
Real Life Application
  • Eleven-year-old Libby has trouble following
    conversational rules. She approaches a group of
    classmates in the hallways and says, Hey
    Abigail, guess what? Abigail, who was already in
    a conversation with someone else, does not hear
    her and continues talking with her friend. Libby
    does not pick up on this social cue and instead
    proceeds to tell Abigail about her weekend, even
    though Abigail is still talking. When Abigail
    does acknowledge Libby and starts talking to her,
    the conversation breaks down further.

30
Real Life Application
  • Libby responds to some of Abigails comments with
    remarks that are not relevant to the
    conversation. She doesnt allow the usual
    give-and-take, instead taking longer
    conversational turns, and often talks at the same
    time Abigail does. In frustration, Abigail
    finally says, Libby, you never listen to
    anything I say! and walks away. Other girls who
    witness the scene agree that Libby is frustrating
    to talk to and decide amongst themselves that she
    is weird.

31
Libby
  • What social cues did Libby fail to recognize?
  • How did this affect her conversation with
    Abigail?
  • How do you think her peers perceptions of them
    could be negatively affected because of their
    language disorder.

32
The Role of the Special Education Teacher
  • Consult or collaborate with the Speech-Language
    Pathologist on specific needs and helpful
    strategies for the individual child.
  • The Special Education Teacher may work on childs
    goals throughout the week in addition to the
    child meeting with the SLP.
  • Ensure classroom accommodations are being
    followed.
  • All additional responsibilities of a classroom
    teacher.

33
Instructional Strategies
  • Powerful strategies to support the learning of
    students with SLI impairments
  • Always assume competence.
  • Incorporate Literacy
  • Provide Visual Input
  • Model Fluent Reading (choral reading, paired
    reading, etc.)
  • Use multiple types of Reading Strategies
    (prediction, readers theatre, etc.)
  • Divide academic goals into smaller units
  • Present only one concept at a time
  • Use tactile and visual cues
  • Offer Maximal social interaction opportunities

34
A Story of Hope
  • Hope
  • Hope 2
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