Language Disorders in Toddlers & Preschool-Aged Children Flashcards

1
Q

what age span is toddlerhood

A

1 1/2 to 2 1/2 years (18-30 months)

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2
Q

What are the language milestones of toddlerhood

A

vocabulary explosion, emergence of early grammar/syntax

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3
Q

what are the 5 principles of assessment in toddlerhood

A

family-centered assessment, assess as early in the Childs life as possible, work with a collaborative team of other professionals, involve individuals from the child’s culture, gather an extensive case history, evaluate caregiver-child interactions, make sure hearing has been tested, use multiple measures in assessment, make sure assessment is nondiscriminatory and appropriate

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4
Q

three major milestones in toddlerhood

A

development of new vocabulary, new communicative functions, Childs level of play

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5
Q

how can we assess vocabulary in formal assessments

A

standardized (peabody picture vocabulary test, expressive one word vocabulary test) norm-referenced parent report (MacArthur-bates communicative development inventories, MCDIs)

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6
Q

when are the MCDIs administered and what are its parts

A

16-30 months, pt. 1 parents make words the child says or signs, pt. 2 parent indicate child’s understanding of word forms and the complexity of the child’s multi-word utterances

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7
Q

disadvantages of communicative development inventories

A

can be subject to bias either up or down, requires literacy skills if we are sending them home with a parent/caregiver, norming sample can be an issue

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8
Q

how do we test receptive vocabulary in an informal assessments

A

prompt with “lets play with the train” and have them choose it out

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9
Q

how do we test expressive vocabulary in an informal assessment

A

prompt with “ oh you found a ___” and let them fill in the blank

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10
Q

what are the functions we see in the pre-linguistic stage

A

behavior regulation, social interaction, joint attention

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11
Q

what additional functions of communication emerge in toddlerhood

A

ask and answer questions, talk about people/ things not present, negotiate, make jokes, lie

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12
Q

what are the benefits of play

A

play is how children learn, knowing about children preference, provides information about developmental functioning

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13
Q

what are we looking for in play

A

how social is the play, what cognitive level is the play, how is language being incorporated into the play

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14
Q

the time before children say their first meaningful words

A

prelinguistic phase

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15
Q

what age does the prelinguistic phase run from

A

birth - 15 months approximates

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16
Q

the two parts of the prelinguistic phase

A

perlocutionary and illocutinary

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17
Q

runs from birth- approximates 9 months and children do not have communicative intent

A

perlocutionary stage

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18
Q

children are unaware that behaviors affect partners, caregivers respond as if its intentional

A

perlocutionary stage

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19
Q

during the perlocutionary stage, children generally demonstrate:

A

eye contact, smiles and vocalization, shared affect, turn- taking/ engaging in routines

20
Q

t/f the lack of perlocutionary stage behaviors is a red flag for a language disorder

A

true

21
Q

what behavior I the key to all early communication intentional or otherwise

A

eye contact

22
Q

reductions in eye gaze may be the earliest sign of later risk for what disorder

A

autism spectrum

23
Q

t/f children with disabilities may have reduced production of smiles and vocalizations for various reasons

A

true

24
Q

what are the two types of shared affect

A

shared positive affect and protest/shared negative affect

25
Q

looking at communication partners to share in excitement

A

shared positive affect

26
Q

including partners when ‘fussing’ or distressed

A

protest/ shared negative affect

27
Q

ability and eagerness to take turns in fun games is a critical part of the emergence of intent because turn-taking games are predictable

A

turn-taking and routines

28
Q

list the four behaviors of assessment targets

A

eye contact, smiles and vocalizations, shared affect, turn-taking and routines

29
Q

for children who do not demonstrate the behaviors reliably the behaviors become

A

intervention targets

30
Q

takes place from approximately 9-15 months

A

illocutionary stage

31
Q

when does the illocutionary stage begin

A

with the emergence of communicative intent

32
Q

what is communicative intent

A

children realize they can affect the behavior of others without using words

33
Q

what behaviors are seen during the illocutionary stage

A

eye gaze shift, persistence, satisfaction/frustration, change in form of attempt, use of conventional form (words)

34
Q

what of communication is how the client is communicating

A

mode

35
Q

what of communication is why the client is communicating

A

function

36
Q

list the 3 functions of communication in the prelinguistic stage

A

joint attention, behavior regulation, social interaction

37
Q

when assessing behavior what are we looking for

A

if the child demonstrating behaviors that indicate intent

38
Q

when assessing modes what are we looking for

A

what modes are being used, how often is each being used

39
Q

t/f gestures do not predict language development

A

false

40
Q

when assessing functions what are we looking for

A

what functions are used, how frequently do each occur

41
Q

t/f there shouldn’t be an equal representation of the three communicative functions

A

false

42
Q

list the parts of a prelinguistic assessment

A

case history, behavioral observation, criterion-referenced assessment

43
Q

what do we do to treat prelinguistic clients who need to establish intentionality

A

help caregivers identify important behaviors and develop parents supportive responses

44
Q

what do we do to treat prelinguistic clients who have some intentionality

A

encourage the parent to respond to prelinguistic forms of communication, use evidence based interaction strategies

45
Q
A