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Teaching Students with Communication Disorders

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Teaching Students with Communication Disorders Stephanie Bronson Joyce Mustafa Emily Stretcher Linette Banks Teaching Students with Communication Disorders ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Teaching Students with Communication Disorders


1
Teaching Students with Communication Disorders
  • Stephanie Bronson
  • Joyce Mustafa
  • Emily Stretcher
  • Linette Banks

2
Teaching Students with Communication Disorders
  • Communication is the process of exchanging
  • ideas, information, needs, and desires.
  • (Owens, 2005)
  • Communication disorders include difficulties
  • transferring knowledge, ideas, opinions, and
  • feelings. (Oyer, Crowe, Haas, 1987)

3
Speech Disorders
  • The major components of speech include
  • Articulation involves the production of speech
  • sounds.
  • Fluency is the flow and rhythm of language.
  • Voice is the quality of speech that includes
    resonance, pitch, and intensity.

4
Articulation Disorders
  • The most common speech disorder.
  • Ability to produce speech sounds continues to
    develop through 8 years of age.
  • There can be a 3 year difference between early
    learners and late learners.
  • Girls usually develop earlier than boys.
  • Children's speech should be 90 developed by the
    time they enter kindergarten.

5
Articulation Disorders continued....
  • Types of articulation errors
  • Substitutions - one sound is substituted for
    another. Examples
  • wabbit for rabbit, tat for cat, free for
    three
  • Ommissions - when a sound is not included in a
    word. Example Boo for blue, pity for pretty
  • Additions
  • Distortions

6
Fluency Disorders
  • Difficulty with the rate and flow of speech.
  • Most of us are nonfluent at times. An example of
    this is when we hesitate in the middle of
    sentences, break the flow with fillers such as
    um, you know, like, and ah.
  • Stuttering is the most common fluency disorder.
    It is characterized by an interruption in the
    forward flow of speech. (Palmer Yantis, 1990)

7
Fluency Disorders continued....
  • 98 of cases begin before age 10 (Mahr Leith,
    1992)
  • Half of all children that stutter during the
    preschool years recover before the age of 7.
    (Curlee Yairi, 1997)

8
Voice Disorders
  • 3 Dimensions considered
  • Quality (hoarse, breathy, hypernasal/hyponasa
    l)
  • Pitch (high or low, monotone)
  • Intensity (loud or soft)
  • The most common type of voice disorder found in
    school age children is caused by vocal nodules.

9
Vocal Disorders
  • Vocal nodules develop from using the voice
    incorrectly or from overuse.
  • Nodules that are too large make the student lose
    their voice and require surgery.
  • Students need to be taught the importance of good
    oral hygiene that includes 1) keeping yelling at
    a minimun, 2) getting breath support from the
    stomach, 3) limiting time spent talking in noisy
    places, and 4) avoiding vigorous coughing
    (Lue,2001).

10
School-Age Language Disorders
  • Language is the representation of ideas using a
    conventional code.
  • Receptive language, or comprehension, is a
    person's ability to understand what is being
    communicated.
  • Expressive language, or production, is a person's
    ability to convey an intended message.

11
Language Content
  • Semantics is the meaning and content of words or
    word combinations.
  • Vocabulary is an individual's working knowledge
    of words. A student's ability to grasp abstract
    concepts increase with their vocabulary.
  • Word Categories and Word Relationships are
    understood and organized by students during
    school-age years.

12
Language Content continued....
  • Understanding the relationships among concepts
    are important to successful learning. Types of
    relationships include these categories
  • Comparative (taller than)
  • Spatial (above, under)
  • Temporal-sequential (before, first)
  • Causal (because, therefore)
  • Conditional (if....then)
  • Conjunctive (and)
  • Disjunctive (either.., or)

13
Language Content continued....
  • Contrastive (but, although)
  • Enabling (so that, in order that)
  • Multiple Meanings - students with communication
    disorders usually have more limited vocabularies,
    and their word meanings are more concrete, and
    have a harder time grasping multiple word
    meanings that include which meaning to apply.
  • Figurative Language - represents abstract
    concepts

14
Language Content continued....
  • Types of figurative language
  • Idioms (It's raining cat's and dog's.)
  • Metaphor (She watched him with an eagle eye.)
  • Similes (He ran like a frightened rabbit.)
  • Proverbs (The early bird catches the worm.)

15
Language Form
  • Language form is the structure of the language
    and includes
  • Phonology- focuses on the sounds of language and
    the rules that determine how those sounds fit
    together.
  • Phonemes are the smallest linguistic units
    of sound that can signal a meaning
    differ- ence.
    Phonological
    awareness is the students'

16
Language Form continued.......
  • ability to understand that words contain
    sounds and that sounds can be used to construct
    words.
  • Morphology the rule system that governs the
    structure of words and word forms.
  • Morphemes are the smallest unit of language that
    convey meaning.
  • Syntax is the rules that govern the order of
    words in sentences.

17
Language Form continued......
  • Types of Morphemes
  • Free morphemes stand alone.
  • Examples cat, run, pretty, etc.
  • Bound morphemes cannot stand alone when added to
    words to change their meaning.
  • Syntax is the rules that govern the order
  • of words in sentences

18
Language Use/Pragmatics
  • Pragmatics is the purposes or functions of
    communication, how we use language in a social
    context.

19
Metalinguistics
  • Involves thinking about, analyzing, and
    reflecting on language as an object in much the
    same way one reflects on a table or a friend.

20
Prevalence of Communication Disorders
  • Approximately 10 of children in elementary
    school have communication disorders.
  • 20 of all children with disabilities receive
    services for speech or language disorders
  • Over 88 of these students are included in
    regular classrooms (US Dept. of Education, 2001)

21
Prevalence of Communication Disorders continued
  • Communication disorders occur three to four times
    more often in boys than girls.
  • Occurs more often in pre-schoolers

22
Identifying a Student with Possible Language
Disorders
  • Language Form
  • Does the student mispronounce sounds or words and
    omit endings more than the other students do?
  • Does the student comprehend and produce types of
    sentences similar to those of the other students?

23
Identifying a Student with Possible Language
Disorders continued
  • Are the students comprehension and production
  • IS the student's language as elaborate and
    descriptive as that of the other students?

24
Identifying a Student with Possible Language
Disorders
  • Language Content
  • Does the student comprehend and produce
    vocabulary as rich and varied as that of the
    other students?
  • Does the student comprehend others' ideas and
    express his or her ideas as effectively as other
    students in the classroom?

25
Identifying a Student with Possible Language
Disorders continued.
  • When talking, does the student have significantly
    difficulty finding the word he or she wants to
    use?

26
Identifying a Student with Possible Language
Disorders
  • Does the student comprehend and use figurative
    language and multiple meanings of words similar
    to that of other students in the classroom?
  • Language Use
  • Does the student use language for different
    purposes? including to gain attention?

27
Identifying a Student with Possible Language
Disorders continued
  • Ask for and tell about information
  • Express and respond to feelings?
  • Use imagination to understand and tell stories
    and jokes?
  • Express opinions and persuade?

28
Identifying a Student with Possible Language
Disorders
  • For greetings, introductions, and farewells?
  • Does the student take turns appropriately in
    conversations?
  • Does the student initiate conversations?
  • Does the student stay on topic during a
    conversation?
  • ,

29
Identifying a Student with Possible Language
Disorders continued
  • Does the student have more than one style of
    interacting, depending on the listener,
    situation, and topic?
  • Does the student recognize when the listener is
    not understanding and act to clarify
    communication for the listener?

30
Instructional Guidelines Accomodations
  • Facilitating Speech Development
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