Wednesday, January 6, 2010

What We're Working On

Honestly, we could do with a little less snow

Nolan's speech continues to take off, with such spontaneous phrases as:

  • "I don't want green sock. I want white sock!"
  • "Matthew pushed me! No pushing, Matthew!"
  • I don't want take nap."
We do have some minor articulation issues - he misses some sounds- hockey comes out as "hah-hee" and the word four comes out has "hor." He also confuses the B/M/N sounds on occasion ("I meed that" instead of "I need that," or "The moy did it" instead of "The boy did it"). These are really minor and his speech is intelligible for the most part, so we work on these sounds, but don't fret over any of it. It will come in time.

We are actively working on some language processing skills. Nolan struggles with echolalia (the fancy term used to describe parroting back what you just said) and auditory processing. It isn't a severe issue, but it is rather obvious during many exchanges.

An example of the echolalia would be this:

Question: "Nolan, where did you go today?"
Response: "No-wa, where go day?"

He will answer a simpler question, such as "what color is this flower?" because there is only one possible answer, and he doesn't have to think of what to say.

Another example of auditory processing issues is this:

"Nolan, do you want blue or yellow?"
"Yellow."
"Nolan, do you want yellow or blue?"
"Blue."
"Nolan, do you want blue or red?"
"Red."

Instead of thinking about what he wants, he simply mimics the last word uttered. Frankly, it's easier than thinking of both choices and then choosing the one he wants.

So we're working on the echolalia with a lot of modeling. This appears to be working in some ways, because we have gotten a spontaneous "yes" response twice this past week! It will be an ongoing exercise for us, as the more open-ended questions will take a bit more work.

To get Nolan to listen to a whole sentence and retain it (rather than just repeat the last word as his answer), we are giving him two choices, but with one choice far less desirable than the other. And the less desirable option comes last in the sentence. For example,

"Nolan, do you want to go sledding or go inside?"
"Nolan, do you want to play with playdough or do a puzzle?"
"Nolan, do you want juice or water?"

This is working very well. Often he'll stop, start to say "water," then look at me to repeat the sentence. This time he'll listen to the whole thing, retain both choices, and select the one he really wants.

Matt is still in speech therapy, though his speech has continued to progress to the point where the issues are more minor articulation concerns. There is a great likelihood that he will graduate from speech therapy this spring. We are currently working on "cluster reductions" (that's where he omits some sounds from the middle of a word- screwdriver would be pronounced as "'kew-dyer") and getting the /s/ sound in blends (snow is pronounced as "no" and "school" is "kool").

His preschool did a speech screening last month, and I am interested to see how he did with an independent Speech Language Pathologist. I wonder if he "passed" or "failed" the screening. He receives speech services through June no matter what, but we will have to have another IEP meeting next October to continue or stop his current services. He also starts the Universal Pre-Kindergarten program next year, so if he gets speech therapy, it will likely be during school.

5 comments:

Ericka said...

Wow that's a lot of snow!
Miles has some articulation issues too but I think for the most part it's pretty typical for a 2 year old. My favorite ones are "Dino-haur" for dinosaur and "motor-hycle" for motorcycle :)

CAUSE ME TO HEAR said...

Look at all that snow! We got about 4 inches last week and we thought we were completely snowed in! It's the first real snow we've had in 2 years (although the last 2 years we've had horrendous ice storms)!
I have a friend who's son has the same kind of processing issues you're describing. It sounds like you are doing all the right things and making great progress! And how exciting that he is speaking so well!

Herding Grasshoppers said...

Leah, you're (they're) making such wonderful progress! I know it probably seems slow when you hear them every day, but they're really coming along! And what a great idea with offering the less desirable choice at the end - pushing him to listen more closely.

They are going to soar :0)

Julie

Kimmy K said...

Grey always answers with whatever you said last, too. I'm going to try putting the good choice first and an undesirable one second. Love it, thanks for the idea!

tammy said...

I'm just catching up on all my blogs after the move/holidays etc.
Fist, I can't believe all the snow you all have! WOW! I'm excited about the little bit we have, although I did sink past my boots today! lol

Second, your boys are doing so fantastic! We do the "choice" thing with Aiden just to get him to say new words, but so far everything he drinks is still "mil" (milk).