Title: Communication Disorders
1Communication Disorders
Chapter 14
- Chapter 14
- Communication Disorders
- Exceptional Lives Special Education in Todays
Schools (4th ed.)
Chapter 14
2How Do You Recognize Students with Communication
Disorders?
How Do You Recognize Students with Communication
Disorders?
Defining Communication Disorders
- Communication entails receiving, understanding,
and expressing information, feelings, and ideas. - Communication and language include both the
content and the medium used. - Speech and language disorders (often associated
with other disorders) - Speech disorder refers to difficulty in producing
sounds (cleft palate). - Language disorder refers to difficulty in
receiving, understanding, and formulating ideas
and information. - Cultural diversity
- Difference does not always mean disorder.
- Dialects are various forms of language.
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3How Do You Recognize Students with Communication
Disorders?
Describing the Characteristics
- Typical speech development
- Follows a typical and predictable pattern and
time table - By the age of 8, children can produce nearly all
the consonants and vowels that make up the native
language. - There is variation among children in the time of
acquisition. - Speech disorders
- Articulation production of individual or
sequenced sounds - Substitutions, omissions, additions, and
distortions - If these problems interfere with peer
interactions or educational performance REFER - Apraxia of speech motor speech disorder
affecting the planning of speech - Difficulty with the voluntary, purposeful
movement of speech (stroke, tumor, head injury,
developmental) - Can produce individual sounds but cannot produce
them in longer words or sentences - Voice disorders pitch, duration, intensity,
resonance, and vocal quality - Fluency disorders interruptions in the flow of
speaking - Stuttering frequent repetition and/or
prolongation of words or sounds
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4How Do You Recognize Students with Communication
Disorders?
Describing the Characteristics
- Typical language development
- Language development is complex
- Depends on biological preparation, successful
nurturance, sensorimotor experiences, and
linguistic experiences - Five components of language
- Phonology the use of sounds to make meaningful
syllables and words - Phonemes individual speech sounds
- Morphology the structure of words
- Morphemes the smallest meaningful unit of
speech (e.g., s) - Syntax the rules for putting together a series
of words to form sentences - Semantics word and sentence meanings for what is
spoken - Pragmatics social use of language
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5How Do You Recognize Students with Communication
Disorders?
Describing the Characteristics
- Characteristics of language impairments
- Language disorders may be receptive, expressive,
or both. - Language disorders may be related to another
disability or may be a specific language
impairment. - Phonological disorders difficulty in
discriminating differences in speech sounds or
sound segments - Morphological difficulties problem using the
structure of words to get or give information
(e.g., proper tenses) - Syntactical errors problem with the correct
word order in sentences that meaning is lost for
listeners - Semantic disorders problems using words singly
or together in sentences - Pragmatic disorders problems in the social use
of language (e.g., eye contact, body language,
organization)
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6How Do You Recognize Students with Communication
Disorders?
Identifying the Causes and Prevalence
- Two types of speech and language disorders
- Organic caused by an identifiable problem in the
neuromuscular mechanism of the person (hereditary
malformations, prenatal injuries, toxic
disturbances, tumors, traumas, seizures,
infectious diseases, muscular diseases) - Functional those with no identifiable origin
- Speech and language disorders can also be
classified according to when the disorder began. - Congenital present at birth
- Acquired occurs well after birth
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7How Do You Evaluate Students with Communication
Disorders?
How Do You Evaluate Students with Communication
Disorders?
Determining the Presence
- Speech assessment speech pathologist uses a
standardized articulation test to measure
articulation, voice, and fluency problems. - Voice evaluations includes both quantitative
and qualitative measures (interviews and case
history) - Fluency assessments evaluated through a
conversation with the student and interview with
parents - Three areas to be assessed relative to language
interactions in the classroom - The students ability to use language effectively
by speaking and listening tasks - The teachers language
- The language requirements of the lessons and
textbooks - Assessments for students who are bilingual or
multilingual - Evaluation teams need to take a holistic view of
the students communication skills using
ecological assessments.
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8Figure 14-4
How Do You Evaluate Students with Communication
Disorders?
Determining the Presence
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9Figure 14-5
How Do You Assure Progress in the General
Curriculum?
Including Students
Describe how students with communication
disorders are supported in the general education
curriculum.
10How Do You Assure Progress in the General
Curriculum?
Planning Universally Designed Learning
- Adapting Instruction
- Ask varied types of questions to encourage
students self-expression - Expand student utterances by using modeling more
elaborate language - Augment or alter classroom language by providing
statements that explain a students nonverbal
behaviors - Allow students opportunity to practice public
verbalizations - Keep in mind the need of some students for AAC
systems - Figure 14-6 (page 417)
- Augmenting Instruction
- Repetition of the curriculum
- Visual supports graphic organizers,
photographs, gestures, sign language - Direct instruction in social skills
Reflect on how communication disorders can be
accommodated in the general curriculum.
11Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC)
- ACC systems are an integrated group of components
that supplement the communication abilities of
individuals who cannot meet their communication
needs through gestures, speaking, and/or writing. - An AAC device is a physical object that
transmits or receives messages. - Types of AAC communication books, communication
boards, communication charts, mechanical/electrica
l voice output, computers, etc. - Using the AAC devices
- Using eyes to look at the symbol
- Touching the symbols with fingers
- Using a laser beam attached to the head
- Scanning
- Encoding