Guest guest Posted February 10, 2004 Report Share Posted February 10, 2004 My son does this right now too. I have always thought it was b/c he needed extra time to process what he was saying. He does it mostly when just talking to me alone. I think he is more likely to express complex thought with more complex vocabulary with me b/c I am " comfortable " enough to him for him to experiment with thoughts, ideas, new words, etc. This is why I have always thought it was a processing issue. I am interested in responses to this! Tricia Morin North Carolina My oldest has now gotten into the habit of stammering, repeating a word a few times before getting out the rest of his thought. This is the kid who originally started talking by jumping to sound out each syllable. Any suggestions? Is this consistent with Apraxia? One ST thought it might be nervousness, which might make sense if it is incrasing tone abnormally to the throat and voice box, but I'm not sure. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 11, 2004 Report Share Posted February 11, 2004 Hi - My 5.5 year old still does this a bit when he's excited. Often if I interrupt him, it's worse - or if he gets distracted midsentence. It's part of the planning part - imagine how difficult it was for him to put all the syllables together - now apply that difficulty to words. While I know my son has a word retrieval problem, given enough time and (sometimes, when it's bad) reminding him to take his time and being very patient (and expressing that with your face and actions) makes it easier for him to spit out what he wants to say. Hope this allays your concerns a bit - Marina --- In , " fopt " <fopt65@a...> wrote: > My oldest has now gotten into the habit of stammering, repeating a > word a few times before getting out the rest of his thought. This is > the kid who originally started talking by jumping to sound out each > syllable. Any suggestions? Is this consistent with Apraxia? One ST > thought it might be nervousness, which might make sense if it is > incrasing tone abnormally to the throat and voice box, but I'm not > sure. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 11, 2004 Report Share Posted February 11, 2004 Stuttering and apraxia, is it a stage or overlap? Dysfluency can be part of normal development in speech in young children -and if our kids can go through drooling and teething at three -why would it be impossible for them to go through dysfluency at three or older? When did I first bring this up on the web...over three years ago http://cahn.mnsu.edu/profin4/_disc1/0000008c.htm Tanner today at 7 and a half, I wouldn't describe it as stuttering anymore. He at times speaks a bit slower, but not always. He almost always needs to break his long thoughts into shorter sentences, and pause between each one. He can talk -but it takes longer to get it out then most of us. You can hear his most recent talking page update here http://www.debtsmart.com/talk/tanner.html Below I cut and pasted some archives on this -but there are many more. In particular notice the parent observed " stages of apraxia " that I wrote below. There are that many apraxic children that go through this " stuttering " thing I call it a " stage " I say I wouldn't change anything below but I take that back. Now that I think of it, since our children don't go through normal developmental stages young -it's OK they go through them older. With appropriate therapy they will continue to develop past these stages. At least that's what I have seen in Tanner and some others in this group. But that's not a fact -just my opinion. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Archives My Tanner's problem today at almost seven is with stuttering on and off. Today Tanner's doing really well in speech -but as I posted below -now that he is learning to read and his vocabulary is expanding and he's pushing himself to speak in longer more complex sentences -he ranges from having almost no stuttering to hesitation on many words. For this reason -I just took Tanner to see stuttering expert Dr. Dale from Florida Atlantic University who diagnosed Tanner as having 20% fluency issues. Dr. believes that Tanner's stuttering is not a true stuttering -but a developmental one. Apraxic stuttering...appears there is such a thing -so I guess down the road we will hear more about this. Dr. confirmed that once apraxic children learn to talk -they are hearing more and more about children with apraxia and stuttering together. What was of great interest to those of you in this group who also report hearing stuttering coming and going in your apraxic child is that Dr. said that " we have done an injustice as you say to apraxia and have not studied it enough, so we really don't know how long is " normal " for the dysfluency stage in an apraxic child -we really don't. We do know that many apraxic children appear to take longer to go through stages. " Dr. advised not to proceed with traditional stuttering therapy for now -outside of continuing with slow and easy speech practices. So here is the good news for all of us in this group who have children going through this -Dr. said " I don't believe this is something that Tanner will be dealing with for life at this point " ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~` I first wrote this over two years ago in January 2002 for inclusion in The Late Talker as parent observed stages of apraxia viewed through our grouplist. This list was approved by all CHERAB advisors http://www.cherab.org/information/speechlanguage/advisoryboard.html (but needed cleaning up which I never did) We ended up not including this in The Late Talker because even though approved, in the final cut we needed to edit out almost 300 pages for our book, and this included awesome pages that were already completed. Dr. Marilyn Agin, Malcolm Nicholl and I chose to leave in only the most critical information for a parent of a newly diagnosed apraxic child to know. I still don't want to clean this up, or change from my original writing from over 2 years ago -so here it is, what I still stand by and what still needs to be studied in my opinion and what I'd travel to hear a researcher explain: ~~~~~~~~~~~~ " Just like typically developing speech in a child, a child with apraxia appears from the members of our large Foundation to have stages they go through -and some children skip one or two -or pass through some of them quickly or get stuck in one or more of them. We don't know if all the member's children were properly diagnosed with apraxia or not, but this may be worth looking into. OBSERVED APRAXIA STAGES (?) THAT SHOULD BE EXPLORED FURTHER Stage 1 non verbal stage Where the child uses one or two sounds to communicate everything with gestures, and made up elaborate sign. At this stage, depending on the infant's or child's age you may not be able to diagnose verbal apraxia, but neurological soft signs should be looked for, as well as signs of oral motor problems or oral apraxia. An older apraxic child who is stuck at this stage will be using augmentative devices and could be at risk for misdiagnosis of cognitive ability if not tested appropriately. Stage 2 simple talk stage Where the child begins to just like a typically developing child learn new sounds or words, but unlike a typically developing child, most (not all) appear to forget how to say the sounds or words again, so they lose that ability to " build " their speech like most other children do. This is in most cases the only stage that is acknowledged by ASHA and described by most of the speech professionals*. Please see examples above (breaks down with longer utterances, etc.) An older apraxic child who is stuck at this stage will be using augmentative devices and could be at risk for misdiagnosis of cognitive ability if not tested appropriately. Stage 3 Dysfluency stage Where the child who seemed to be progressing so well suddenly begins to stutter. Most speech professionals do not consider classic " stuttering " only a normal developmental dysfluency. However with apraxic children this stage is especially frustrating in that if the apraxic child does go through this stage, they appear to get " stuck " here. In speaking to members from the CHERAB Foundation who's apraxic child goes through this stage, there is frequently another member of the family who is a stutterer, which may mean there is some type of genetic link. Type of therapy to provide to an apraxic child at this stage that is appropriate is not clear and depends on which expert you speak to-in some cases there are direct oppositional views. Stage 4 Baby Talk stage Where the child who is now talking and being understood continues to mix up past and present tense, as well as sentence structure, and frequently will leave out the " little words " like " the " and " a " . This may not have anything to do with SLI as discussed above, an apraxic child typically does keep sentences shorter than average, but there may be children diagnosed in the SLI area that are apraxic, and visa versa -and being there is a genetic link to both SLI as well as apraxia, a closer look needs to be taken at this stage. A five year old apraxic child who receives appropriate therapy, including some of the recent discoveries we will talk about later, may progress faster than previously stated, however just like in the previous stage, apraxic children also seems to get stuck in this stage. An example would be " Me want doe too " for " I want to go too " or " Mommy me walk store too? " for " Mommy can I walk to the store too? " Stage 5 Full language stage Where the child, teenager, or adult apraxic has learned strategies to overcome the apraxia enough that it's not noticed by the average listener. However upon closer observation you will notice that an apraxic in the full language stage will frequently use less sophisticated language. An example comes in right here. Instead of saying " an apraxic in the full language stage will frequently use less sophisticated language " they may say " an apraxic in the full langwer' stage will not sound as grown up most of the time " So in other words, there will still be words that he or she can not pronounce correctly, and being aware of them, will avoid them and substitute when they can. They can be highly intelligent, but due to their lack of expressing themselves using sophisticated language at times others may not know this. This is perhaps in some ways just as frustrating a stage as any other. In some cases maybe more so because now that they are " talking " and talking fine most of the time, ASHA professionals may not consider them candidates for further services. The genetic possibilities and medical involvement needs to establish these stages, including this one, so the population can understand and accept this disability just like they do for those with poor eyes or poor hearing. This is an example of a late talker that unfortunately for all did not " just start talking " Another strong point that our Foundation has seen that is not acknowledged by most professionals yet is that a child with apraxia at two may not have had it from birth. So for this reason, the " signs " of apraxia always stated may not relate to the parent of a late talker, and for that reason they may not believe their late talker to be apraxic ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tanner's therapist tried the therapeutic listening for Tanner to help stop some dysfluency he developed when he started talking based on the theory that it would help with the right-left brain activity. My experience makes me recommend auditory therapies as part of the treatment for our children with multisensory communication impairments. I believe a multi -sensory approach will be proven to be most effective for our children down the road -I just don't believe in waiting, and was thrilled to have an open minded SLP like working with Tanner. Anecdotally -Tanner would have trouble speaking clear and getting his words out -and then within a minute of putting the headphones on his words would come clear and smooth -not sure why but since it appeared to help we used it. He had a waist band to wear so he could wear his CD player around when playing, during therapy -etc. The only activities we were told not to let him do while wearing the headphones were watching TV or playing on the computer. Tanner doesn't use the therapeutic listening program much anymore, however his speech is also much better now, and he's older and is more aware of " what's cool " (at 6 and a half can you believe it?!!) I just want all of you to know you will probably not read the above anywhere else since this is not what the program is intended for. It was just a theory of 's -but it worked amazingly well for Tanner! was trained by Vital Links so I was able to order the special headphones which had the " right " and " left " ear marked -and the " correct " CDs for Tanner from Vital Links http://www.vitalsounds.com/ You can not order from this company without the training code of the professional that took the course. Supposedly using the wrong CDs can be harmful somehow. (any OTs want to explain the danger of listening to the wrong CDs?) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ From: " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted June 2, 2011 Report Share Posted June 2, 2011 Singing is supposed to help with stammering. No one stammers when they sing. http://www.stammering.org/peralm.html granny On Thu, Jun 2, 2011 at 6:18 AM, <northnr@...> wrote: > > > (almost 18) has been stammering some for the last maybe 6 years. It > really decreases her intelligibility. Speech has worked with her to take a > breath and think about what she is sayiing. Sometimes it works. Does anyone > have any sugestions on therapy, techniques or anything to helpKathy > Sent from my Verizon Wireless BlackBerry > > -- *Not for ourselves, but for the world were we born.* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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