Treatment Principles Contrasted Phonological Disorder Childhood Apraxia of Speech Principles of Motor Learning Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Natalie Mullis, MT-BC Lady St, Suite 710 Columbia, SC
Advertisements

5-1 Chapter 5: Stages and Strategies in Second Language Acquisition With a Focus on Listening and Speaking ©2012 California Department of Education, Child.
Response to Intervention (RtI) in Primary Grades
A Vehicle to Promote Student Learning
Supporting Students with Challenging Behavior in the Classroom
Scenario 5: Finishing a lesson in an orderly way
Practice Schedules Chapter 9.
Articulation Treatment
Los Angeles Unified School District Division of Special Education Schools for All Children Developmental and Learning Characteristics of Students with.
Strategies for Supporting Young Children
Practice Makes Perfect – But Which Practice? Enhancing Motor Learning Of New Vocal Techniques.
Lise Fox, Ph.D.: University of South Florida
LEAP Preschool: An Inclusive Model of Early Autism Intervention
Scenario 12: Giving instructions
1 Organizational, Time Management, and Planning Treatment for Children with ADHD (OTMP Study) NIMH-funded R01 New York University – Howard Abikoff, PI.
Targeted & Individual Systems of Support Lori Newcomer, Ph.D. Tim Lewis, Ph.D. University of Missouri – Columbia OSEP Center for Positive Behavior Interventions.
Early Childhood Outcomes Center 1 Understanding the Three Child Outcomes.
Let’s Get Talking! Lisa Drake, CCC-Sp. Terms Speech Sound Articulation.
Copyright (c) 2003 Allyn & Bacon Chapter 12 Facilitating Reading This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following.
Color Me Fluent Sarah Benjamin & Annette Boldt. Introduction Created by Alice Anne G. Farley Incorporates learning theory, behavior modification, and.
Chapter 6 Treatment of Language Delays and Disorders in Preschool Children.
CSD 5400 REHABILITATION PROCEDURES FOR THE HARD OF HEARING Auditory Training.
Teaching Students with Autism Discrete Trial Training & Naturalistic Teaching Strategies.
CSD 2230 HUMAN COMMUNICATION DISORDERS
 not pick up on social cues and may find it hard to read others' body language, start or maintain a conversation, and take turns talking.  dislike any.
Welcome!. How to teach what you know… Paula Williams Mike Taylor Neil Watkins.
Module 2: Schoolwide/Classroom Interventions
Trina D. Spencer ABA 2009 Research Based Principles What Practice Can’t Do Without.
Supporting Children with Challenging Behaviors Refresher Training.
Speech and Language Development
Fitness Education. Traditional physical education teaches students baseball, football, and basketball. Concepts-based fitness education teaches students.
KEY KNOWLEDGEKEY SKILLS  The principles and processes of learning as applied to the cognitive, associative and autonomous stages, including the role feedback.
Chapter #2: Motor Learning for Effective Coaching and Performance
Speech and Language Issues For Babies and Pre-school age children who have Down Syndrome Ups and Downs Southwest Conference 2007.
Key Stage 3 National Strategy Foundation Subjects MFL: optional module 5.
Childhood Apraxia Defined Typically defined in terms of sound production error patterns, but actually a disorder of movement. Difficulty is noted with.
Disorder that usually develops by the age of three. It is characterized by: -impaired verbal and non-verbal communication -impaired social interaction.
Phonological Intervention Principles, Methods, and a Paradigm.
One Step at a Time: Presentation 6 LISTENING SKILLS Introduction Initial Screen Skills Checklist Classroom Intervention Lesson Planning Teaching Method.
CHILDHOOD APRAXIA OF SPEECH (pp ). I. INTRODUCTION.
Fitness Education Chapter 13. Traditional Views of Fitness Goal was to get kids fit Focus was on activities and doing fitness (for example, weight training,
Direct Behavior Rating: Using DBR for Intervention.
Year 1 Reading Workshop. End of Year Expectations Word ReadingComprehension As above and: Letters and Sounds Phases 4 to 5.  Respond speedily with the.
COACHING. Coaching focuses on partnering with families. This is a shift from the expert telling parents what to do in a top down fashion to a coach who.
Current Approaches to Management of DAS Michelle D. White.
Guiding Music and Movement Experiences
SEVERE DEVELOPMENTAL DISABILITIES Kathy Rivas November 13, 2014.
Tier 3 Intervention The Most Intense Level of Intervention!!!
Motor Behavior Chapter 5. Motor Behavior Define motor behavior, motor development, motor control, and motor learning. What is the influence of readiness,
Classroom management for learners with disabilities.
Chapter 7: A Comprehensive and Evidence- Based Treatment Program.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation prepared by Mary J. Sariscsany, California State University Northridge.
Supporting Children with Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN) Monday 21 st March Emily Alderson – Speech and Language Therapist.
APPLICATION OF MOTOR LEARNING TO DEVELOPMENTAL APRAXIA OF SPEECH Melissa M. Mueller, B.A. Carlin F. Hageman, Ph.D. Angela N. Burda, Ph.D. Ken M. Bleile,
12th Biennial National Conference Choices that matter: ECI in a new era … Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) and the Transdisciplinary Key Worker (TDKW)
Ups and Downs Southwest Conference 2007
Chapter 5 Early Identification and Intervention
(adapted from Keri Huddleston, 2016)
Precision Teaching - what is it?
Learning and Teaching Principles
Integral Stimulation and Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing DTTC
Childhood Apraxia of Speech: Treatment Types
Copyright 2001 by Allyn and Bacon
Basic Principles and Procedures in Treatment of SSDs
School-Age Speech and Language
CHILDHOOD APRAXIA OF SPEECH
Chapter 11 Augmented Feedback
Teaching prominence through kazoos
Music Therapy
Presentation transcript:

Treatment Principles Contrasted Phonological Disorder Childhood Apraxia of Speech Principles of Motor Learning Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Treatment Principles Phonological Disorder Phonological Principles Intervention is based on the systematic nature of phonology. Intervention is characterised by conceptual activities rather than motor activities. Intervention has generalisation as its ultimate goal, promoting intelligibility. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

1. If using a 3-position SODA test transcribe entire words in order to see error patterns. 2. Work at word (meaning) level. 3. Work towards functional generalisation. 4. Treat a pattern, or patterns, of errors. 5. Teach appropriate contrasts. 6. Direct the childs attention to the way that different sounds make different meanings. Make this apparent to parents too, e.g., give them examples of their own childs homonymy. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen P HONOLOGICAL D ISORDER 10 Points to Consider in Intervention

7. Use naturalistic contexts that have meaning (hold interest) for the child, because this helps demonstrate to the child that the function of phonology is to make meaning. 8. Stack the therapy environment with several exemplars of each individual target word so the child can self-select activities, e.g., for work on eliminating Velar Fronting, for the target words: car, key, core, cow, have available several different cars, car keys, car books, etc. 9. Select targets with an eye to their potential impact on the childs system. 10. Carefully select exemplars of an error pattern / phonological rule. With clever exemplar-choices, the rule is learned, and carries over to the other targets. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

3-to-5 minimal pairs! Elbert, Powell and Swartzlander found that they could teach as few as 3 to 5 minimal pairs, and their participants showed spontaneous generalisation to other words containing the target sounds. Elbert, M., Powell, T. W., & Swartzlander, P. (1991). Toward a technology of generalization: How many exemplars are sufficient? Journal of Speech and Hearing Research, 34, Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Treatment Principles Childhood Apraxia of Speech CAS Therapy Principles Intervention is based on the principles of motor learning. Intervention is characterised by motor activities rather than conceptual activities. Intervention has habituation and then automaticity as its ultimate goal, promoting intelligibility. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

1. Use paired auditory and visual stimuli in intensive practice trials. 2. Train sound combinations (CV VC CVC …) rather than isolated phones. Not p-b-p-b; f-f-f! 3. Keep the focus in therapy (and at home) on movement performance drill. Feedback to the child should reflect this. 4. Use repetitive production trials / systematic drill as intensively as possible. 5. Carefully construct hierarchies of stimuli, using small steps. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen C HILDHOOD A PRAXIA OF S PEECH 15 Points to Consider in Intervention

6. Use reduced production rate with proprioceptive monitoring (childs self-monitoring). Prolong vowels. 7. Use simple carrier phrases and simple cloze tasks. 8. Pair movement sequences with suprasegmental facilitators: including stress, intonation and rhythm. Be thinking prosodic contour of the utterance all the time! No. No? No! No. No. NO!!! Me. Me? Me! Me. Me. ME!!! 9. Use singing, whispering and loudness judiciously. 10. Establish a core vocabulary or a small number functional power words (that make things happen) early in therapy, especially for non-verbal or minimally verbal children. BRAG BOOK. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

11. Use sign / AAC to facilitate communication, intelligibility and language development, and to reduce frustration. Reassure families that AAC wont get in the way of learning to speak. 12. Be flexible. Treatment changes over time. Signal changes and explain them to parents. Changes may be misconstrued. 13. Present regular, consistent, effective homework as a given, within reason. 14. Expect good days and bad days in terms of the childs performance. 15. The principles of motor learning apply to CAS dynamic assessment and therapy. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Motor Learning A set of processes associated with practice or experience leading to relatively permanent changes in the capability for movement. Schmidt, R.A., & Lee, T.D. (2000). Motor control and learning: A behavioral emphasis (3rd ed.). Champaign, IL: Human Kinetics.

Motor learning principles apply to CAS assessment and therapy Precursors to Motor Learning 1) Motivation 2) Focused attention 3) Pre-practice phonetic placement training prior to entering the practice phase Behaviour management plan for children who are difficult Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Conditions of Practice Motivation Goal / target setting what, how many times Instructions Modelling Setting and with whom etc many factors, very individual Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Practice Schedules Repetitive drill Massed vs. distributed practice Random vs. blocked practice. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Repetitive motor drill There must be sufficient trials (repeats of the target behaviour) within a practice session for any motor learning to take place, and for it to become habituated. Habituation is a step towards more automatic speech output processing (automaticity). Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Reinforcements (praise) should not take up too much time, or make too much noise, or interrupt, or distract. Guide parents; model how to do it. Choose and develop appealing activities that will facilitate / invite repeated opportunities for production of target behaviour / utterance. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Massed vs. distributed practice Massed: Fewer but longer sessions. Quick development of skills. poor generalisation. Distributed: The same duration of practice, distributed across more sessions. Takes longer. better motor learning. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

In the real world we may not HAVE a choice regarding practice distribution. But we must decide which targets to select and how many targets to address concurrently… Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen …ensuring homework implementers know what to do, and how to do it, and are aware of any changes. …ensuring homework implementers know what to do, and how to do it, and are aware of any changes.

Blocked vs. Random Practice Blocked practice All practice trials (repeats) of a stimulus (target) are done in one time block before moving to the next target. Tends to lead to better performance. Random practice The order of presentation of all stimuli is random through the session. Tends to lead to better retention, and hence better motor learning. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Feedback to the child: knowledge of movement performance Essential to give a child frequent information about his/her movement performance. Cognitive-motor literature reports that adults benefit from finely specified feedback. Conversely, if feedback is too specific childrens performance can decrease. Tailor the frequency of feedback to suit the child (it can distract some children). Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Rate of production trials Usually a trade-off between rate and accuracy. Slower rate will, up to a point, increase accuracy. Varying the expected rate of production can be effective. It encourages habituation of articulatory movement accuracy while working towards automaticity, a natural rate, and natural prosody. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen

Pre-practice Recall that the Precursors to Motor Learning are a) Motivation b) Focused attention c) Pre-practice Pre-practice involves phonetic placement training prior to entering the practice phase. For many clients it is inextricably bound up with stimulability training. Copyright © 2011 Caroline Bowen