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Georgia State University Series: Communication Development Day 3, Part 1 July 2001 – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Georgia State University Series:


1
Georgia State University Series
  • Communication Development
  • Day 3, Part 1
  • July 2001

2
What is normal Communication Development?
  • All Babies
  • Gestures
  • Vocal Signals
  • Behavioral
  • English
  • ASL
  • Note All of these serve a pragmatic function.

3
Gestural Communication
  • Pointing to something
  • Holds up what he wants

4
Vocal Signals
  • Crying
  • Babbling
  • Cooing
  • Gurgling

5
Crying May Indicate
  • Boredom
  • Feeling alone
  • Hungry
  • Wet
  • Tired

6
Behavioral Communication
  • Trying to open cabinet
  • Reach for an object
  • Avoid unpleasant situation
  • Attention getting

7
Communication
Turn Daily Activities into Language Lessons
8
Rules for Daily Interaction
  • Specific Objectives
  • Choose vocabulary and grammar that is
    developmentally appropriate
  • Focus on a few goals each week BUT also
  • Learn in context
  • Talk, Talk, Talk
  • Sign, Sign, Sign
  • Explain what your doing and why even if it
    appears the child does not understand

9
Work on Specific Objectives
  • Discuss ways with Resource Team
  • Choose developmentally appropriate objectives
  • Post on the refrigerator
  • Keep notebook
  • Who
  • How Often
  • Childs attempts to imitate

10
Objectives (cont)
  • Reinforce
  • Praise
  • Picture Notebook of Family Saying / Signing /
    Playing

11
Learning in Context
12
Bath
  • Count toes
  • Sing songs This little piggy
  • Drying off and massage with lotion while labeling
    body parts
  • Dressing

13
Meals
  • Count Cheerios
  • Peek -a- Boo
  • Drop the napkin
  • Cover head with napkin wheres ---?

14
Play
  • Baby dolls feed or dress doll
  • Cars Vroom Sounds

15
  • Trade Books
  • Board Books large pictures / few words
  • Name Describe pictures
  • Repetition

16
  • Activity Books
  • Make a book out of small 5 x 7 picture album with
    pictures of family members, pets, favorite toys
    etc.
  • Let child take the book in the stroller, car, bed
    and talk about the pictures

17
Making Logical Connections
  • Do not assume that the child connects one even to
    another
  • Examples
  • Drive Thru?
  • Greeting Card?
  • What day you do it?
  • Use pictures sequences to show event relationship

18
  • Do not assume that the child can anticipate
    events
  • Examples
  • Going to doctor
  • Losing candy
  • Having a birthday party
  • Have chat Before, Now and Later

19
  • Do not assume that the child understands
    cause-effect relationship
  • Examples
  • Hot burner
  • To do First, Then

20
Watch Ways Your Child Tries to Communicate
  • Point?
  • Babble?
  • Squeal?
  • Communicate to get attention?
  • Get something he or she wants?

21
Both deaf and hearing babies develop
communication skills in similar ways.
22
Typical Sequence of Language Learning for Hearing
Children
  • Early prelinguistic stage
  • Late prelinguistic stage
  • Single sign/word
  • Early word combinations
  • Multi-word combinations
  • Expanded grammar
  • Adult-like language development

23
Early Prelinguistic Stage 0-6 Months
  • Infant turns toward a speaker
  • Attends to an unfamiliar voice
  • Highly sensitive to touch
  • Uses different sounds to communicate different
    needs
  • Shares sounds with their parents (coos, babbling
    of vowel-like sounds)

24
Later Prelinguistic Stage 6-12 Months
  • The infant listens when spoken to
  • Turns/looks when name is called
  • Begins to respond to requests and questions
  • Uses sounds, other than crying, for attention
  • Babbling sounds like words (dada, mama)
  • Utterances begin to vary in stress and have
    adult-like intonational patterns

25
Single Sign/Word 12-18 Months
  • The infant understands and responds to basic
    communication
  • First words appear that are reduplications of
    consonant-vowels (dada, mama, bye-bye)
  • Continues the use of jargon (strings of
    non-sensical utterances with varied stress and
    adult-like intonational patterns)

26
Early Word Combinations 18-24 Months
  • Points to pictures in books, or body parts, when
    named
  • Follows/understands simple commands and questions
  • Listens/enjoys simple books, rhymes, songs
  • Rapidly developing vocabulary
  • Combines two words into simple questions/statement
    s (daddy work more juice)

27
Multi-word Combinations 24-36 Months
  • Infant understands complex sentences
  • Understands contrastive meanings of words
    (hot/cold)
  • Learns 2-4 new words every day!
  • Uses attributes to describe nouns (BIG dog)
  • Jargon disappears
  • Establish topic-comment relations

28
Expanded Grammar 3-4 years
  • Understands complex language forms
  • Sentences and questions are becoming longer and
    more complex
  • 90 of sentences are grammatically correct
  • Children will talk about events that happened
    away from their home and what may happen in the
    future

29
Adult-like Language Age 5
  • Has a large vocabulary, as well as grammar
  • Enjoys stories and can answer questions about
    them
  • Constructs long and detailed sentences
  • Tells long and involved stories
  • May tell fantastic, tall stories
  • May engage in conversation with strangers

30
Typical Sequence of Language Development in
American Sign Language
31
Stage 1
  • Infant begins to use basic handshapes (B, C, O,
    A, S, 1, 5)
  • Begins to use single-signs
  • Begins to use simple movements (up, down)
  • Begins to combine signs into two sign utterances
  • Copies actions/signs of others
  • Begins to use headshake with negative sign
  • Begins to use questions (yes/no/what/where)

32
Stage 2
  • Tries to use complex handshapes, but tend to
    simplify them
  • Starts to modify verbs
  • Begins three-four sign sentences
  • Begins to use classifiers
  • Storytelling different roles, body shift, facial
    expression (not always clear)
  • Substitutes objects that are present to talk
    about objects that are NOT present

33
Stage 3
  • Uses complex handshapes with accuracy (X, Y, T,
    R, 3)
  • Begins to use complex movement (wiggles)
  • Continues refining verb modification
  • Begins to use noun modification for intensity,
    size, and quality
  • Begins to use rhetorical questions (turtle
    run-who win-turtle)
  • Begins to use topicalization
  • Inconsistent use of points in space when
    storytelling

34
Stage 4
  • Consistent use of complex handshapes, movements,
    fingerspelling, and names
  • Begins to show spatial agreement of objects
  • Begins to use conditionals (e.g. if)
  • Appropriate use of referencing objects that are
    not present storytelling is clear
  • Uses bracketing to indicate wh questions

35
Differences between deaf and hearing infants
begin to develop around six months of age.
36
At six to seven months, hearing babies begin
producing rapid consonant-vowel productions,
termed canonical babbling
Ba-ba-da-da-ma-ma. However, the deaf infants
babbling decreases dramatically.
37
Some experts have hypothesized that there is a
critical period in which children must be
exposed to a complete language in order to have
native-like competence. Lack of a first language
results in the child progressing at a
semi-lingual state.
38

Therefore, it is imperative that parents or
caregivers understand how language develops in
their infant in order to assess their progress.
39
Studies have found that Deaf mothers use more
facial expression and more gestures when
communicating with their children. This kind of
non-verbal feedback encourages children to look
at their mothers, which is an important step in
supporting visual communication and in developing
speechreading skills. This can be achieved
through several strategies
40
Gaining and Directing Attention
  • Break the childs line of sight and gain
    attention using movements of the hands and body
  • Touch the child
  • Use pointing to direct attention while still
    permitting language input
  • Reinforce eye-contact by smiling, clapping or
    signing

41
Make Language Salient
  • Reduce the frequency of communication so it is
    recognized as worthy of attention
  • Meaningful
  • Relevant

42
Reduce need for Divided Attention
  • Use short utterances
  • Position self and objects in childs visual field
  • Move hands, face or both into childs visual field

43
Link Language and Meaning
  • Bracketing Sign or Phrase at both the beginning
    and end of an utterance
  • BIRD TREE SIT(point) BIRD
  • Modify Signs Displace, Repeat, Enlarge and
    Prolong sign

44
Describe Event While it Happens
  • Instead of directing a
  • childs gaze to an
  • object or event and
  • talking about it while
  • he or she looks at it, talk
  • about the object or
  • event before or after
  • directing the child to
  • look at it.
  • With a child who is using
  • manual communication,
  • the location of the
  • signing can be moved into
  • the childs line of sight,
  • or the childs body can be
  • used instead of the
  • signers.
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