Guest guest Posted December 27, 2006 Report Share Posted December 27, 2006 I came across this site a few days ago and am hoping to get some advice or suggestions for our situation. We adopted our daughter from China in September of 2005. She turned two in October and has not progressed much with her speech. From the research and information that I have been reading she should be caught up to other children her age if she has been home for a year. She has been home for over a year and just doesn't have much of a vocabulary. I also recently found out that she is mild to moderately tongue tied which our doctor said was not affecting her speech. We have tried to get her into speech but found out our insurance wouldn't cover it if it was a developmental delay. Our doctor suggested that we get her evaluated through the public school system. We did that and she didn't qualify. She did everything the speech therapist asked her to do without any problem except for verbalizing. It is very frustrating because most of the time she won't even try to imitate what we say. She whines and crys a lot and gets frustrated when we try to make her speak. I've been reading a lot of books and looking for suggestions on the internet. I try to implement as much of that as I can but am not getting a lot of results. Any suggestions or advice would be great. Thanks! in Lincoln, NE Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 28, 2006 Report Share Posted December 28, 2006 If your daughter completed all of the receptive language tasks but had difficulty with expressive language tasks and speaks only a few words at 26 months she should have qualified for speech therapy in the public schools based on her expressive deficits. She would need a Standard Score of 77 or below in the area expressive language she should qualify. The Standard Score of 77 usually qualifies in most states. Did she have a receptive-expressive gap in that there was a big gap between receptive and expressive language skills. Does she exhibit any clinical indicators of childhood apraxia of speech? Read the book the Late Talker, and get a private speech and language evaluation from a therapist who is familiar with apraxia. Check with the local university's speech and language department. They are usually less expensive than private therapists. Do a google search on the speech and language development internationally adopted children. Pollack, SLP has done a lot of work with children adopted from China.Good Luck. MW,SLP Guy & <huskerfire12345@...> wrote: I came across this site a few days ago and am hoping to get some advice or suggestions for our situation. We adopted our daughter from China in September of 2005. She turned two in October and has not progressed much with her speech. From the research and information that I have been reading she should be caught up to other children her age if she has been home for a year. She has been home for over a year and just doesn't have much of a vocabulary. I also recently found out that she is mild to moderately tongue tied which our doctor said was not affecting her speech. We have tried to get her into speech but found out our insurance wouldn't cover it if it was a developmental delay. Our doctor suggested that we get her evaluated through the public school system. We did that and she didn't qualify. She did everything the speech therapist asked her to do without any problem except for verbalizing. It is very frustrating because most of the time she won't even try to imitate what we say. She whines and crys a lot and gets frustrated when we try to make her speak. I've been reading a lot of books and looking for suggestions on the internet. I try to implement as much of that as I can but am not getting a lot of results. Any suggestions or advice would be great. Thanks! in Lincoln, NE __________________________________________________ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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