How can parents support language development: Language development: children 0-8 years

Опубликовано: February 28, 2023 в 10:43 pm

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Language development: children 0-8 years

Language development in children: what you need to know

Language development is an important part of child development.

It supports your child’s ability to communicate. It also supports your child’s ability to:

  • express and understand feelings
  • think and learn
  • solve problems
  • develop and maintain relationships.

Learning to understand, use and enjoy language is the first step in literacy, and the basis for learning to read and write.

In their first few years, children develop many of the oral language skills that help them to learn to read when they go to school. And they keep developing language skills throughout childhood and adolescence.

How to encourage early language development in children

The best way to encourage your child’s language development is to do a lot of talking together about things that interest your child. It’s all about following your child’s lead as they show you what they’re interested in by waving, babbling or using words.

Talking with your child
From birth, talk with your child and treat them as a talker. The key is to use many different words in different contexts. For example, you can talk to your child about an orange ball and about cutting up an orange for lunch. This helps your child learn what words mean and how words work.

When you finish talking, pause and give your child a turn to respond.

As your child starts coo, gurgle, wave and point, you can respond to your child’s attempts to communicate. For example, if your baby coos and gurgles, you can coo back to them. Or if your toddler points to a toy, respond as if your child is saying, ‘Can I have that?’ For example, you could say ‘Do you want the block?’

When your child starts using words, you can repeat and build on what your child says. For example, if your child says, ‘Apple,’ you can say, ‘You want a red apple?’

And it’s the same when your child starts making sentences. You can respond and encourage your child to expand their sentences. For example, your toddler might say ‘I go shop’. You might respond, ‘And what did you do at the shop?’

When you pay attention and respond to your child in these ways, it encourages them to keep communicating and developing their language skills.

Reading with your child
Reading and sharing books about plenty of different topics lets your child hear words used in many different ways.

Linking what’s in the book to what’s happening in your child’s life is a good way to get your child talking. For example, you could say, ‘We went to the playground today, just like the boy in this book. What do you like to do at the playground?’ You can also encourage talking by chatting about interesting pictures in the books you read with your child.

When you read aloud with your child, you can point to words as you say them. This shows your child the link between spoken and written words, and helps your child learn that words are distinct parts of language. These are important concepts for developing literacy.

Your local library or mobile library is a great source of books.

If your family speaks two languages, you can encourage your child’s language development in both languages – for example, English and Spanish. Bilingual children often have language skills similar to their peers by the time they’re in primary school.

Language development: the first eight years

Here are just a few of the important things your child might achieve in language development between three months and eight years.

3-12 months
At three months, your baby will most likely coo, smile and laugh. As they grow, your baby will begin to play with sounds and communicate with gestures like waving and pointing.

At around 4-6 months, your baby will probably start babbling. Baby will make single-syllable sounds like ‘ba’ first, before repeating them – ‘ba ba ba’.

Babbling is followed by the ‘jargon phase’ where your child might sound like they’re telling you something, but their ‘speech’ won’t sound like recognisable words. First words with meaning often start at around 12 months or so.

If your baby isn’t babbling and isn’t using gestures by 12 months, talk to your GP or child and family health nurse.

Find out more about language development from 3-12 months.

12-18 months
At this age, children often say their first words with meaning. For example, when your child says ‘Dada’, your child is actually calling for dad. In the next few months, your child’s vocabulary will grow. Your child can understand more than they can say. They can also follow simple instructions like ‘Sit down’.

18 months to 2 years
Most children will start to put two words together into short ‘sentences’. Your child will understand much of what you say, and you can understand most of what your child says to you. Unfamiliar people will understand about half of what your child says.

If your child doesn’t have some words by around 18 months, talk to your GP or child and family health nurse or another health professional.

Find out more about language development from 1-2 years.

2-3 years
Your child most likely speaks in sentences of 3-4 words and is getting better at saying words correctly. Your child might play and talk at the same time. Strangers can probably understand about three-quarters of what your child says by the time your child is three.

Find out more about language development from 2-3 years.

3-5 years
You can expect longer, more complex conversations about your child’s thoughts and feelings. Your child might also ask about things, people and places that aren’t in front of them. For example, ‘Is it raining at grandma’s house, too?’

Your child will probably also want to talk about a wide range of topics, and their vocabulary will keep growing. Your child might show understanding of basic grammar and start using sentences with words like ‘because’, ‘if’, ‘so’ or ‘when’. And you can look forward to some entertaining stories too.

Find out more about language development from 3-4 years and language development from 4-5 years.

5-8 years
During the early school years, your child will learn more words and start to understand how the sounds within language work together. Your child will also become a better storyteller, as they learn to put words together in different ways and build different types of sentences. These skills also let your child share ideas and opinions. By eight years, your child will be able to have adult-like conversations.

Find out more about language development from 5-8 years.

When to get help for language development

You know your child best. If you have any concerns about your child’s language development, ask your child and family health nurse, GP or paediatrician. They might refer you to a speech pathologist.

Early Childhood Language Development | Key Strategies

Speech, language, and communication are critical areas of development for children. They play a vital role throughout our lives, helping us to understand what is going on around us, communicate our basic needs and feelings, hold conversations, think and learn, develop relationships, solve problems, and more. They also support many other aspects of development, including cognitive, social, and literacy development.

Research has found, however, that in some areas, more than 50% of children entering reception have language levels below what is expected for their age. Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, this statistic has likely worsened as language development has regressed for many children, leaving them behind their peers.

Both parents and early years workers could play a significant role in helping to improve children’s language development and outcomes. To aid you in doing this, in this article we will cover the stages of normal language development, why it is so important, how to recognise potential speech problems, and what you can do to support young children’s language.

The contents of this article are as follows:

  • What Does Normal Language Development in Early Childhood Look Like?
  • Why is Speech and Language Development Important?
  • How Do I Recognise Speech Disorders in Children?
  • Strategies to Support Language Development

What Does Normal Language Development in Early Childhood Look Like?

Speech and language development involves four main components:

  • Phonetics and phonology: learning to pronounce speech sounds, as well as understanding the rules about which sound sequences occur in the language.
  • Semantics: learning vocabulary and understanding how concepts map onto words – for example, does ‘dad’ mean any man? Or any man with a beard? Or just one particular man?
  • Syntax and morphology: the rules for how to arrange words in sentences (for example, a verb normally comes second, rather than last), and how to change things like tense, voice, or number – for example, is the plural of ‘sheep’ ‘sheeps’?
  • Pragmatics: learning social rules for using language, including adapting your language for who you’re talking to, taking it in turns to speak, and staying on topic. This also includes learning non-verbal communication – including facial expressions, gestures, and tone of voice – and how this interacts with the words we’re saying.

As you can see, learning how to communicate is quite complicated. The good news is that children are programmed to be able to do it, but they do need lots of input from adults to be able to kickstart this process. This also needs to be direct, face-to-face input from a real human being; children can’t learn language effectively from TV or computer games, even if they are ‘educational’ (Kuhl, 2007 and others). As a result, the more you talk to a child (or baby) and support their language, the more progress they will make.

We use milestones to get a sense of what normal language development looks like – this is a more accurate way of measuring than attempting to compare one child with another, because all children are different. Understanding each milestone of development will help you to choose the right strategies to support a child with their speech and language.

Ages and Stages of Language Development

Babies start learning to recognise language even while they’re in the womb. Research has shown that they remember stories that they were read while they were in utero, as well as recognising their mother’s voice (DeCasper and Fifer, 1980, 1986; Kisilevsky et al., 2003).

Once they’re born, their development tends to progress through the following stages:

Age Characteristics of Stage
3-12 months Cooing, smiling, and laughing
Playing with sounds – babbling (e.g. da, da, da)
Communicating with gestures like waving and pointing
Sounding like they’re talking, but not using recognisable words
12-18 months Saying their first words with meaning – for example, saying ‘mama’ to call for their mum
Understanding many more words than they can say, including instructions like ‘sit down’
Mostly using nouns in their speech, such as ‘car’ or ‘duck’
By 18 months, using between 50 to 150 words
18 months to 2 years Combining words in telegraphic speech (e. g. ‘me go’, ‘dada throw ball’)
Using simple pronouns (‘me’, ‘I’, and ‘you’), but often confusing ‘me’ and ‘I’
Naming objects that they see regularly
Responding to simple commands like ‘pick up your coat’
2-3 years Beginning to say longer sentences of three or four words
Using some plurals and past tenses
Talking about what they’re doing as they do it
Conversation skills improve – they respond to you more often
3-4 years Speaking more clearly – strangers can mostly understand them
Asking ‘who’, ‘what’, and ‘why’ questions
4-5 years Using more complex sentences with words like ‘because’, ‘if’, ‘and’, or ‘when’
Telling stories and simple jokes
Being able to answer questions about stories
Being able to follow requests

We have only mentioned a few aspects of each stage here – for a more detailed list, see our article ‘Why is Child Development So Important in Early Years?’ or take our course on Supporting Speech and Language Development in Early Years.

Communication and Language in the EYFS

If you are an early years worker, you can also use the Early Years Foundation Stages (EYFS) to measure a child or baby’s development. The early learning goals for communication and language are:

  • Listening and attention – including the ability to discriminate sounds and maintain and monitor attention in a shared context, and being able to anticipate key events in stories.
  • Understanding – first words in context, then phrases, and gradually more complex sentences, as well as questions like ‘how’ and ‘why’.
  • Speaking – being able to express their feelings, needs, wants, thoughts, ideas, past experiences, and pretend play events.

Children are expected to achieve these goals when they have turned five years old. Ofsted inspectors will check to see whether early years practitioners are using adequate strategies to help children develop their communication and language skills. We will provide some ideas of strategies you can use later in this article.

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Why is Speech and Language Development Important?

We have already mentioned that speech and language development is vital in a child’s life, but a more detailed list of the benefits associated with it includes:

  • Providing a foundation that they can build on at school. Children need to develop their speech and language before they can learn to read, and language is the main way that information is transferred from teachers to students, learnt, and understood.
  • As a result of the above, children’s early vocabulary is a predictor of their later educational outcomes, particularly reading comprehension and decoding (e.g. Bleses, Makransky, Dale, Højen, & Ari, 2016). Smaller vocabulary sizes in the early years lead to worse academic performance later on.
  • Language development is hugely important for children’s overall development – for example, it supports cognitive advancement.
  • It helps children to form friendships. Using language facilitates them having meaningful interactions with those around them.
  • It enables them to communicate their needs better, reducing frustration (and, in turn, tantrums or outbursts).
  • Children are able to make more sense of the world around them. Language is tied to our thoughts and the way we perceive the world – when we are able to describe what is going on around us in words, this helps us to understand it.

As a result, it is important to do whatever you can to help the children and babies in your care to improve their communication and language skills.

Want to learn more?

Our course on Supporting Speech and Language Development in Early Years explains what typical development in this area looks like, discussing a range of support strategies approved by speech and language therapists, and going into detail about speech, language, and communication needs – including what causes them, warning signs, and how to help children who you know or suspect might have them. Have a look at our course library to see this and other courses that we offer.

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How Do I Recognise Speech Disorders in Children?

As with all types of development, things can go wrong when children are learning to communicate. This could be due to difficulties with learning, cognition, hearing, or sight, or a poor learning environment with little interaction with adults. In this section, we will describe the different types of language problems, their symptoms, and what you should do if you suspect a problem.

Types of Language Problems

Children might experience any of the following issues:

  • Language delay – where they are developing along the normal lines, but are slightly behind the average in achieving each milestone. This is the most common developmental delay in children, and more than half of language delays in children under three resolve themselves.
  • Developmental Language Disorder – where they have problems either understanding language (receptive language delay) and/or using words themselves (expressive language delay). This might be misdiagnosed as poor behaviour, poor listening, or inattention.
  • Speech sound problems – where children find it difficult to produce a certain sound – for example saying ‘wadio’ instead of ‘radio’ (articulation disorder) – or they make a pattern of sound mistakes, such as consistently saying only one syllable in a word, like ‘bay’ for ‘baby’, or changing certain consonants in lots of different words, such as ‘tat’ for ‘cat’ and ‘toffee’ for ‘coffee’ (phonological process disorder).
  • Fluency – where children stutter or stammer. This might happen at the beginning of a word, such as ‘li-li-like’, could involve speech having to completely stop, or could be the repeated interruption of speech with ‘um’ or ‘uh’. Children under five quite often stutter as they’re learning to speak, and this comes and goes. However, one in five children have a stutter that is more severe.
  • Attention and listening problems – where children are unable to concentrate on speech and filter out background noise effectively, leading to them ignoring speech, interrupting, or being easily distracted.

Being aware of the different types of language problems will help you to communicate the problem to a professional, if necessary, as well as giving you an idea of how you can help in the meantime.

Symptoms of Language Problems

Symptoms that could indicate a language problem include:

  • Lack of attention when being spoken to – easily distracted.
  • Failing to carry out simple tasks or instructions (when old enough to understand these instructions).
  • Poor eye contact.
  • Speech that is extremely difficult to understand – only comprehensible 50% of the time.
  • Uninterested in being read to.
  • Repeating the same thing over and over again.
  • Avoiding conversations.
  • Consistently making speech sound errors over a long period of time.
  • Not speaking at all by 18 months of age, or not understanding speech by this age.
  • Not recognising or labelling common objects.
  • Difficulty learning nursery rhymes or simple songs.

It is not always a problem if children do not meet milestones ‘on time’ – there is a huge range within normal development. However, if you are worried that a child is behind where they should be, making a list of when they do achieve each milestone will help you see whether there is a pattern.

Be aware that language development will be slightly different for English as an Additional Language (EAL) children. Having less exposure to English will mean that they develop more slowly – they are not necessarily delayed, they just haven’t heard enough of the language to learn it yet.

What Should I Do if I Suspect a Problem?

It’s important to act if you suspect a language problem, because delayed language development can cause frustration for you and the child, as well as difficulties learning and making friends, and behavioural problems. On the other hand, early intervention can be extremely helpful and mitigate any effects of the delay or disorder.

If you are worried about a child’s language development, the first step is to talk to your GP – if you are not the child’s parent, you may wish to tell the parents your concerns and suggest that they book an appointment. You don’t need to try and diagnose the problem that the child is experiencing, but giving the GP or parents an idea of the symptoms would be useful.

The GP will refer the child to a speech and language therapist, if necessary. The speech and language therapist can decide what can be done to help, and what the potential for change is (their speech therapy goals). They might give parents exercises to do with the child, or have one-to-one sessions with them.

There are often long waiting times for intervention, so in the meantime it’s important that you use all the strategies we will list in the next section to ensure that the child has as much support as they possibly can. Try to understand the problem thoroughly so that you can be empathic and make it easier for the child.

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Strategies to Support Language Development

We have put together eight strategies that you can use to encourage children to develop their language. You may already use some of these strategies, or may need to change what you are doing slightly to maximise the learning opportunities you give to the children and babies around you. Whatever you can do will be helpful in giving them the best outcomes possible.

1. Be a Good Role Model

Since children often learn by observing and copying adults, you need to ensure that you are modelling good speech and language skills as much as possible, including:

  • Speaking slowly, so that children have time to process the information you give them, as well as clearly and calmly.
  • Using short sentences so that they aren’t overwhelmed with language
  • Making eye contact, getting down to the child’s level if necessary.
  • Modelling the right pronunciation and sentence structure, making sure to enunciate each word and sound – for example, it helps children learning to speak if you say ‘going to’ rather than ‘gonna’.
  • Not using ‘baby words’ – children will need to learn the adult version from somewhere, and if you model it for them, they’ll learn it more quickly.
  • Labelling objects and actions around you to teach them more vocabulary – for example, ‘look at that dog!’.
  • Listening carefully when children are talking to you – give them your full attention.
  • Not interrupting when they are speaking.
  • Giving them opportunities to respond by leaving pauses after your sentences – this helps them learn turn-taking in conversations, but also gives them time to think and anticipate your next sentence.
  • Making signs, gestures, or actions as you speak to help convey your meaning.
  • Using expressive language to discuss objects, actions, and emotions – for example, ‘that’s a beautiful picture!’, ‘look at that tall tower!’. This will help children to expand their vocabularies.

Being a good role model only requires you to adapt your behaviour slightly, and can have extremely rewarding results.


2. Read to Them

Reading in early years is extremely effective for language development – it also has many other benefits, as you can find out in our article ‘Why is Reading Important for Children?’. Try to read books every day if you can – it is even useful for babies under six months, but is particularly effective as they get older.

When you read, point to the words as you say them. This helps the children link the spoken word to the written word, and will aid their literacy development later on. Talk about each page to encourage the child to speak – for example, you could say ‘that’s a lot of food – what’s your favourite food?’.

Engage them in the book by using intonation, pointing to pictures, and letting the child guess what will happen next. Toddlers might want you to read them the same book over and over again – this is great for getting them to really absorb the language, and testing whether they can finish the sentences for you. Alongside their favourites, read children books on different topics, particularly as they get older, so that they broaden their vocabularies. Talk about words that they aren’t familiar with, asking them if they know what it means, and explaining it if not.


3. Talk Together

Naturally, talking to a child as much as you can will assist their language development. It’s important to talk to them even when they can’t talk to you – from birth, you should chat about what you’re doing and ask them questions, responding to any gestures or noises they make as if they’ve spoken a sentence. This teaches them how conversations work, and exposes them to lots of vocabulary and sentence structures to become familiar with.

To make your conversations even more impactful, think about:

  • Talking to infants in a singsong, high-pitched voice. They are more likely to tune into this and listen to what you’re saying, thus accelerating their language development.
  • Addressing them by name to get their attention before you speak (and teach them their name!).
  • Expanding what children say by repeating and building on it. For example, if they say ‘car’, you could say ‘yes, look at that red car over there’. Giving the child complete sentences helps them to learn more about grammar.
  • Using parallel talk and self-talk. Parallel talk involves talking about what the child is doing – for example, ‘you are wearing a nice blue dress today’ or ‘you are playing with the toy giraffe’. Self-talk involves talking about what you are doing, such as ‘I am tidying up the toys because it’s almost time to go home’. This helps teach children to pay attention to cues and predict what will happen next.
  • Being positive. If children make an error with their language, you should still say ‘well done’ or ‘yes’ – it takes a lot of effort to learn to talk, and they will need lots of encouragement. You can then repeat what they said, correcting the error; they will learn gradually by hearing you produce the correct forms. For example, if a child says ‘her got dog’, you could say ‘yes, she has a dog’.
  • Choosing topics to work on each half-term. Some vocabulary will come up naturally in conversation, but by choosing a topic (such as daily routines, animals, body parts, food and drink, or colours) you could teach children even more words! The repetition of the same topic over a number of weeks will also make it more memorable.

4. Sing with Them

Singing is particularly important for babies and younger children – it can really help their language development by supporting them in differentiating sounds, recognising rhymes, improving their memories, and broadening their vocabularies. Just as with reading, pause before the end of a song line, getting the children to fill in the gap – for example, ‘twinkle, twinkle, little… (star)’.

You could make up your own songs, or ask older children to do so. If they’re silly, the children might enjoy and remember them even more!


5. Play Describing, Guessing, and Turn-Taking Games

Games are great language activities that you can try out. You could try:

  • Getting the children to feel a hidden object and describe it so that the others can guess what it is.
  • Playing ‘what am I?’, where you describe an object and the children have to guess it – for example, ‘I have four legs and I’m a pet, I like to bark’.
  • Playing I Spy.
  • Sitting in a circle and taking it in turns to pass something around, only speaking when it’s your turn. You could get everyone to answer a question (such as ‘what is your favourite food?’) this way. It also helps to build attention and listening skills, which are vital to good communication.
  • Asking children to wait until you say ‘go’ to do something, such as knock down a tower or make lots of noise. Again, this improves their attention and listening skills.

There are also lots of other games that could be just as fun as these suggestions – see what you can come up with!


6.

Encourage Pretend Play

Pretend play helps children to broaden their vocabularies – you could get them to dress up as characters from their favourite book, make up their own stories, or try role-play using some simple props.

During the play, encourage the child to name the objects that they’re using and ask them questions like ‘what are you doing now?’, ‘where’s teddy’s hat?’. You could give them simple instructions within the play, such as ‘put teddy down’, making them more complicated for older children (‘make your dolly sit on the chair’).


7. Explore Rhymes

Rhymes are key for language development, just like singing. In addition to helping children to differentiate sounds and learn more words, rhymes increase phonological awareness skills and prepare children for learning to read.

You could play games – such as coming up with a word that the children have to find lots of rhymes with – or make up poems together. Reading rhyming stories is another good way to incorporate it into everyday life.


8. Create a Language-Rich Environment

To maximise opportunities for language development, ensure that the environment around you is conducive to good communication. This means:

  • Keeping it organised and uncluttered. Research has shown that tidy rooms help children to learn better.
  • Having displays on the walls that are colourful, include words, and are interesting to look at (but not overwhelming). This is useful for older children who might be beginning to match the spoken word with the written word.
  • Having plenty of books available that are age-appropriate and appealing.
  • Ensuring it isn’t too noisy or there are ‘quiet spaces’ available. To develop communication skills, children need to be able to hear properly – you could use tents or dens to create areas where children could talk to each other, as well as making sure the general volume isn’t too high when you have conversations.

We hope that these eight strategies will give you a good starting point for supporting language development.

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Language development in the early years is crucial for children’s outcomes later on – by using supportive language strategies and learning to recognise potential problems, you can help them to achieve the best outcomes possible. We hope you have found this article helpful!


Further Resources:

  • Supporting Speech & Language Development In Early Years Course
  • Why is Reading Important for Children?
  • Education Training Courses
  • Child Development in Early Years

How to support the development of speech in a child with autism?

02/25/13


Five principles to help parents develop their child’s speech on their own

yourself in one of these parents. You suspect that your child has a speech delay. He’s on a six-month waiting list to see a specialist, but you want to help him now. Or your child has already been diagnosed with a speech delay, but you do not want to be limited to classes with a specialist and are looking for an opportunity to help him at home. Here are some strategies that can be used at home to help develop your child’s speech: take the child’s initiative, take turns, act according to your child’s level, wait for his answer, be attentive to any attempts to communicate.

A speech therapist is one of the most important professionals for children with autism. However, the parents themselves and other people around the child can help him develop speech. Photo: edweek.org

Join your child

Parents can’t wait to share all their play ideas with their kids. But he does not have your experience and skills, and therefore he may have a completely different idea of ​​\u200b\u200bhow to play. Give the initiative to the child and follow his example. If he puts the cube on a hill, repeat after him. So you show him that you understand his game and respect his initiative. By showing your child how to play, you deprive him of the chance to show his imagination.

Let your child start the “talk” in the game. If he puts his plush dog on a chair and says “on”, answer: “on the chair” or “dog on”, or put another animal on the chair and say “on” too.
Do not ask too many questions during the game. Limit yourself to two-syllable comments. If your child speaks in single lines, answer him with two words. By adding one word to what he has already said, you will help him learn to use more complex constructions in speech. If he puts the dog on the hill and says “on”, add: “dog on” or “on the hill”. In this way, you help model phrases that fit the context. It will be more difficult for a child to communicate with you if your speech is overloaded.

Take turns

Take turns in the game. First you put the cube in the bucket, then the child puts the cube in the same bucket. Keep the same duration of “moves”. Wait to give the child time to respond. Many actions are new to him, and it may take him ten extra seconds to comprehend them. If your child does not understand what is required of him, guide him through the “hand in hand” technique. Put your hand on the child’s hand and make the desired movement together.

For the development of a child’s speech, it is important to “go down” to his level and connect to his games, supporting his initiative. Photo: parentdish.co.uk

Act according to your child’s level

Try to speak in a language that the child understands and be at the same level of the body with him. Your speech may consist of sounds, one- and two-syllable sequences. If your child is in the one-syllable sentence stage, use two-word phrases to answer. Copy his actions and sounds. While playing, be physically on the same level as your child. Sit on the floor or on the couch next to him. When you are at the same level as the child, it is easier to maintain eye contact, to see what the child is doing, and for the child to see you.

Wait for the child’s response

Too often, parents rush to fill in the gaps in their child’s speech. To avoid this temptation, make it a rule to wait ten seconds before prompting. They may seem like an eternity, but the child often needs those few seconds to formulate an answer. Responsible for the child, talking to him in a commanding tone – these are instinctive parental reactions. But if we want to teach him to communicate, we must give him the opportunity to formulate his thoughts.

It is important not to fill in the gaps with your own words, but to wait patiently to see if the child can answer you himself. For many children with autism, any independent answer is already a great achievement.

Be attentive to any attempts at communication

When parents approach a child and do not receive an immediate response, their natural reaction is to answer the question themselves. At first glance, this simplifies life, but, in fact, it is a direct sabotage. If we do not expect a response, then our child will usually “justify” our expectations as not being able to communicate. If we listen carefully, perceive gestures, vocalizations and words as meaningful communication, the child will feel confident and understand that he is not trying in vain. Pay attention to any child’s attempts to express himself. This will help you understand him better and make you a more receptive parent. The only way to know what your child wants to say is to listen to what he has to say. We cannot do this if we ourselves are talking incessantly.

The development of a child’s speech at home is an easy task that does not require any special education or sophisticated equipment. Most of the time the child spends with his parents and will be happy to copy his favorite teacher – you.

Special thanks to Natalia Nikitina and Special Translations for the opportunity to publish this material.

Education of children with autism, Communication and speech0001

Memo on the development of the child’s speech
It should be remembered!

In infancy, the child’s speech experience is laid. The first appearance of the speech is a SHOUT. Cry plays the role of voice training and is the first means of communication with the mother, because. by crying, the child causes the appearance of the mother, and with her pleasant sensations.

3 weeks – 1 month of life. The child begins to react to the mother’s touch, bright light, sounds. There is a reaction of concentration on the voice of an adult. The child begins to distinguish the intonations of adults.

1 – 2 months of life. At the turn of 1-2 months, at the first manifestations of joy, the baby has short sounds like “gee”, “khy” (the so-called “cooking”), often accompanied by the appearance of bubbles.

2-3 months of life. The child begins to focus on the voice of an adult and show an emotional response, gelation occurs. Cooing is the pronunciation of sound complexes consisting of lingering sounds (ah-ah-ah, agu, agy, boo, boom-boo), etc. In the process of cooing, the articulatory apparatus is prepared for the pronunciation of sounds, and at the same time the process of developing speech understanding is started. The cooing stage is innate. Cooing is also observed in deaf children.

Remember!

Auditory and visual concentration in a child develops if the child constantly listens to the speech of an adult, sees him.

· While awake, the child must hear speech addressed to him.

· As a result of still one-sided communication with adults, the child begins to distinguish the voices of loved ones, learns to distinguish names, his own name, and then respond to it.

4 months of life. During this period of life, the child pronounces sound combinations, pulls sounds. These sound combinations are even impossible to reproduce.

5 months of life. The child, in response to the speech addressed to him, gives a response vocal reaction, he hums melodiously with chains of sounds (ma-a ba-a, pa-pa). Based on self-imitation, sounds are repeated. The child enters the stage of babbling.

6-8 months of life The first form of speech manifestation appears in the child – babbling. He, as it were, begins to tune his articulatory apparatus according to auditory, acoustic imitation of speech. He begins to pronounce certain sound combinations (pa, kA, ma, ha). At this age, children begin to respond to their name, to differentiate named familiar objects.

8 – 9 months of life. The child is rapidly developing understanding of speech, in the event that an adult constantly communicates with him. The child begins to establish a connection between objects and words that point to them. So, if a child is shown and named an object and at the same time asks “Where is the kitty?”, Then he will look for the object with his eyes.

Stages of manifestation of reaction to an adult;

Turns his head, looks at the object.

Reaches for an object, wants to take it, shows the object with the index finger.

· Gives an object to an adult at his request.

It should be remembered!
* most often, normally, the pause between the moment when the child began to point a finger at an object and the moment when he began to pronounce the word denoting the object is 5 – 8 months.
9 – 11 months of life. The child begins to imitate the sounds of adult speech, to call objects and people syllables. At this age, he begins to understand the “No” command, to carry out the instructions “Give”, “Bring”. With the systematic naming of the surrounding phenomena and objects to the child, by 14-15 months the child will understand in the speech of those around him everything that relates to his daily life. At this age, the speech activity of the adults around him, and, of course, the mother, is great and important for the child.
12 months of life. A child who already has a rich experience of communicating with all family members has a large number of sound combinations, from which the first words will be born in the next month. By the end of 1 year of life, the child masters 8-12 words; “mom, dad, uncle, give, na, boo,” etc.

By the end of 1 year of life, note the following for yourself;
* how many words the child speaks by the end of the 1st year
* what sounds the child pronounces distinctly.

Stages of normal development.

2-4 year of life.
1 – 1.5 years. During this period of life, the child begins to successfully imitate the speech of adults. The child’s passive vocabulary is growing rapidly. He already knows the names of many objects, movements, actions (sit down, get up, take it, carry it). At this age, he pronounces, even if not clearly, all vowels and some consonants.
1.5 – 2 years The child has a sharp jump in the development of active speech. Gradually, speech becomes the main means of communication, displacing facial expressions and gestures.

At 2 years old, a child’s active vocabulary contains 300-400 words. The child clearly pronounces all vowel sounds, correctly pronounces the lightest consonants. The pronunciation of many sounds is unstable, in some cases the child can pronounce them correctly, in others incorrectly. By the end of the 2nd year of life, the child repeats words, phrases after adults, builds sentences already from 3-4 words.

By the end of year 2, make a note of the following;
* Can your child repeat words after an adult,
phrases of 2-3 words.
* does he enter into communication with children, adults?
* answers simple questions from adults?
* which sounds are pronounced clearly and which are indistinct.
3 years Active vocabulary is rapidly growing and reaches 1000-1200 words. In this period of life, the child masters phrasal speech. There is a rapid development of the morphological system of the language. The child learns the categories of number, case, masters the declension of nouns. The kid already freely puts several words into one sentence and forms it grammatically correctly. Example: “Koska, where are you going?” (Cat, where did you go?) The child masters speech so much that he can explain his needs, tell what he saw, easily communicates with peers. At the age of 3, the child easily pronounces soft whistles. The pronunciation of soft sounds is still far from perfect, which is typical for children’s speech at this age stage, since the mobility of the muscles of the tongue and lips is still insufficiently developed. At this age, the child can most often replace hissing consonant sounds with soft ones.
Whistling.
Consonant sounds (r), (l) may be absent or replaced by other sounds.

By the end of the 3rd year of life, mark the following for yourself:
* Can your child build phrases from 3-4 words or more, while trying to coordinate words in number, case, gender.
* Does he use adjectives, numerals, pronouns in addition to nouns and verbs?
* Does he ask questions?
* Can he answer a simple question from an adult on his own?
*is he trying to retell a fairy tale, a story?
* which sounds are pronounced clearly, which are indistinct, are there any improvements in the pronunciation of sounds? (compared to the beginning of 3 years of life).
4 years The child’s active vocabulary is 2000 words. In his speech, in addition to nouns and verbs, the child increasingly uses pronouns (my, yours, ours, yours), adverbs (here, there, here), numerals (1,2). At this age, the child easily remembers and learns the basic grammatical forms of speech. Answers adult questions with detailed phrases consisting of 3-5 words or more. The sound imperfection of speech is explained by age and physiological characteristics. Children of 4 years old can independently and correctly pronounce all the whistling sounds. Hissing sounds (w, w, h, u) cause difficulties, children often replace them with whistling sounds (s, s, c): instead of a hat – syapka, instead of a knife – a nose, instead of a student – a markup.
The child can replace the sounds (p), (l) with the sound (l) li (d): instead of lama-lyama, instead of hand – yucca. In some hard-to-pronounce words, a child can rearrange sounds, syllables: instead of a store-gomazin, instead of a berry – goyada, instead of a rainbow – raguda. All these shortcomings in the process of general and speech development gradually disappear.

By the end of the 4th year, mark the following for yourself:
*can your child, on his own initiative and with the support of an adult, tell about what he saw, where he went?
* Track which sentences predominate in the child’s speech: simple short or extended complex.
* Does it pronounce pure whistling sounds (s, z, ts, s, sz), can you pronounce hissing sounds (sh, w, h, u)
* if the pronunciation of whistling and hissing is difficult, then pay attention to what sounds your the child replaces them.
* check if the child can identify the first sound in words.

Stages of the normal path of development.

5-6 years old.
5 years At the age of 5, a child’s speech becomes more diverse, richer, more correct. The active dictionary reaches 3000 words. Children build their answers from 2, 3, 4 or more phrases. In speech, complex sentences of various types predominate. When retelling, children use direct and indirect speech. They can independently compose a story about events from personal experience, according to the plot. According to the plot, pictures can make up the ending, retell small literary works. At the age of 5, most children master a clear and clear pronunciation of hissing sounds.

By the end of Year 5, mark the following for yourself:
* Can the child talk consistently without gaps about the event in which he took part.
* can your child describe his favorite toy, retell a short story close to the text with intonation.
* What difficulties does the child experience in sound pronunciation? Does it skip whistling, hissing, sonoras (p, l), if not, what sound substitutions does it allow?
* Can determine the place and sequence of sounds in words.
* whether the child knows how to use his voice box. Can speak loudly, quietly, in a whisper in necessary situations.
6 years old.

By the age of 6, the oral speech of children almost does not differ from the speech of adults. By this age, the child, as a rule, has a rich vocabulary.
By the age of 6-7, the child successfully masters the grammatical structure of speech, but single errors can still be noted:
* Difficulties in using the plural of nouns in the genitive case (a lot of pencils, trees, cabbage – pencils, trees, cabbages).
* Difficulties in the formation of possessive adjectives (head of Sobakin, crow’s feather, crawled out of the closet instead of from under the closet, etc. )
* Difficulties in using prepositional case constructions. By the age of 6, the pronunciation side of speech is almost completely formed, children already correctly pronounce all the sounds of their native language. The mixture of hissing and whistling sounds, as well as sounds (p) – (p), (l) – (l) disappears. At this age, the child can, if necessary, change both the volume of speech and its tempo, and use intonation means of expression to the full extent.

By the end of the 6th year mark the following for yourself:
* can the child retell a short story, compose a story from personal experience according to a plan or model, a descriptive story about an object, a story based on a plot picture and a series of pictures.
*Check if your child can express his/her thoughts consistently and concisely both when performing tasks at the request of an adult and in everyday ordinary speech.
* check if your child’s speech has grammatical errors. If errors are allowed, then identify the nature of the errors.