When people think of speech therapy, they tend to think of it as being therapy for problems like stuttering or difficulty saying words with certain letters. Speech therapy is this and more. Children’s speech therapy can make a big impact in a child’s educational career. Let us take a look at some of the reasons.
Receptive Language Skills
Receptive language skills refers to the person’s ability to understand what is being said to him or her. Many times, often in children with learning difficulties, the receptive language is ahead of the expressive skills.
Receptive language is extremely important for learning. If a child does not know what is being said in the classroom, does not have a good receptive vocabulary, school work will suffer and the child will not learn. A speech therapist works with the child to develop better receptive language skills through games, role play and other non-threatening methods.
The Expressive Language Of A Child
Expressive language skills or the ability to express one’s thoughts, feelings and knowledge are extremely important in the educational setting. Poorly developed expressive language skills create a barrier to student participation and create difficulty in assessing how much the student actually has learned. Expressive language deficits are seen in children with autism and other learning disabilities.
Written tasks and spoken tasks are affected by expressive language issues. If a child has low expressive language skills he or she may not be able to provide answers to questions or in discussions even if the answers are known. In therapy, the student learns strategies to help develop better expressive skills through games and practice sessions.
Vocabulary
Expressive and receptive language difficulties can sometimes be the result of limited exposure to the world. Children of parents who are in lower socio-economic groups tend to have vocabulary deficits. Children who are read to consistently from a very early age have better vocabularies than children who are not.
In school, speech therapists can work with the classroom teacher to assist the student with learning the vocabulary from his or her classes.
Articulation
Articulation is the ability to speak so that others understand what you are saying. Lisps, the inability to say specific letter sounds, speaking too fast or too slowly all can be helped with speech therapy.
Problems with articulation can create huge problems for a child at school. Often these children are teased and bullied by classmates. Soon this takes a toll on self-image.
When a child has articulation problems, speech therapy focuses on such things are proper positioning of the lips (open versus closed), tongue flexibility or thrust and others. Blowing a ping pong ball across a table, drinking thick liquids through a coffee stir straw all work to improve articulation errors.
Children’s speech therapy is a vital part of helping a child succeed at school. The earlier therapy is started, the more successful it will be. Some speech problems are noticeable quite early in a child’s life. If they are addressed at that point, so much the better for the child when he or she reaches school age.
There is absolutely no doubting the fact that Florida speech therapy can make an immense difference in any child’s life and any adults career. We’ve got the ultimate inside info on the best Florida speech therapy jobs available.
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