Guest guest Posted September 11, 2006 Report Share Posted September 11, 2006 I'm no expert in this, but echolalia was not how I interpreted the original question. In echolalia, if you ask your child " what did you have for lunch today? " They might say back, " What for lunch today " , rather than answering " A peanut butter sandwich " . My interpretation of " repeating just about anything " was more like when we say to our kids " Say dog. Dog. Say cat. Cat. Say ice. Ice. " My son repeated the words I asked him to LONG before he could pull together spontaneous speech. Words in isolation were clear as a bell, but attempted sentences were still long trains of gibberish (literally). Echolalia, as in the example I gave, or even more pronounced like when a child repeats scenes from movies or TV shows is definitely more autistic. Repeating words in isolation on request is not. - In , " Jeff " <kerripat@...> wrote: > > My apraxia daughter was the opposite...couldn't imitate at all (even > the words she could say spontaneously) until several months of > therapy and supplements kicked in. All of her speech (which was > still very delayed) was spontaneous. I believe that echolalia is > associated more with autism than apraxia. > > Kerri > > > > > > Hey that is a good question - I would be quite interested in > that > > answer myself. My autistic son does a LOT of echolalia (repeating > what he > > has heard) and has little to no spontaneous speech or what his > therapist > > call functional speech. My youngest also " can " repeat, but does > use words > > more appropriately - like saying " n kay " for are you ok when he is > hurt. Or > > " oh no " when something happens.... > > > > and the amazing zoocrew > > [sPAM] [ ] Re: Need a diagnosis!!! > > > > > > > My son, too, repeats just about anything, but can't so much > spontaneous > > > speech. Is this related to apraxia? I was worried it could be a > > > different aspect of delay. > > > > > > How many apraxic kids on this board repeated language (however > badly > > > the pronunciation) but were slow to use that same language > > > spontaneously? > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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