Guest guest Posted October 14, 2001 Report Share Posted October 14, 2001 Tracey, As you know, I am not speaking from experience here, but only on what I have read, and what has been told to me by various sources. Awhile back, I spoke to a speech therapist. I explained to her that my children had NO WORDS... and emphasized - " not a single world, not no, not yes, not uh-huh, no NOTHING. " I think she accepted that as truth, and advised that I wait until they are at least imitating (no matter how inaccurately) what I am saying. She said that her specialty is not getting children to begin talking, but to continue talking, and advance on what little, however little, they have. Before all of this happened, I had thought the speech therapist would actually be the one to jumpstart the speech, so this was news to me. She was SOOOOOOO expensive anyhow, I let it go. And then came the school district. Now, I try to take everything they say with a grain of salt, and again - at the IEP - - - - Jim (our Special Ed Director) didn't include ST into the IEP. When asked about it, he said that there would be no point in starting ST when they had no speech at all. He said that the ABA class should get them to begin on syllables at least, and THEN the ST could come in with a first word, etc. But without a syllable on demand, the ST would be a waste of time - - - according to the SCHOOL. Then, in several online forums, I've also read about other COMPLETELY nonverbal children who have had to wait for ST until " some " speech began, so I'm inclined to think that there is some truth to this. That is not to say that no speech therapist could get any word out of . They very well may - and you certainly won't know until you try. How is doing with her DTT at school - - any progress? I think... if you are paying out of pocket for the ST - - -then I'd hold off until you have some words. If it's covered by some other source, I'd most likely go for it. BUT- I'd keep in mind that speech therapy in itself can be VERY frustrating to a child who CANNOT speak. It could turn off to the whole idea, which would SUCK come the time she DOES say something. I know how you feel, Tracey. I, too, have it in me to begin ST right now, I feel like that will also help. I am planning out our home program these days, and while I know that ABA should be applied for 15 more hours during the week to follow the Lovaas method, I'm thinking of sneaking in about 5 hours of speech instead................. Just thinking, as it's going to be immensely difficult, if not impossible, to find one person who can do the DTT PLUS speech, and do them both well. Grace Re: thoughts about receptive language > In a message dated 10/14/2001 11:59:37 AM Central Daylight Time, > thebyks@... writes: > > > > There can also be motor planning and fine motor skill issues. Think about > > all the motions all the pieces of your mouth and throat have to go through > > in order to get a single word out. Your lips and teeth and tongue all have > > to work together, you have to expell enough air with the right amount of > > pressure to get sound, you have to use the right amount of pressure with > > your tongue and your lips - " b " vs " m " vs " p " - for some kids this just > > doesn't come naturally. They have to learn it and be taught it. Just as > > kids with CP have to be taught how to walk, because their muscles work > > differently > > Sara, > This does make sense. I guess I was just not thinking that way. starts > private speech this week. Did anyone on the lists children start speech > before they could talk? I just don't think the therapist understands that > when I say she has NO words, I mean no words. Should I be waiting to start > her in private therapy when she starts verbalizing? Is this going to be waste > of time? ('s time that is). > > Tracey > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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