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Communication and Emergent Literacy: Early Intervention Issues

3A . . . . Objectives. After completing this session, participants willdefine communication form and function.describe recommended practices for facilitating early communication and language development.describe the relationship between secure attachment and early communication and strategies for facilitating attachment and early communicationcontingent responsivity, turn taking, providing choices, following the child's lead. .

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Communication and Emergent Literacy: Early Intervention Issues

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    1. Communication and Emergent Literacy: Early Intervention Issues Communication and Language Interventions Session 3 Early Intervention Training Center for Infants and Toddlers With Visual Impairments FPG Child Development Institute, 2005

    2. Objectives After completing this session, participants will define communication form and function. describe recommended practices for facilitating early communication and language development. describe the relationship between secure attachment and early communication and strategies for facilitating attachment and early communication—contingent responsivity, turn taking, providing choices, following the child’s lead.

    3. Objectives After completing this session, participants will discuss the importance of concept development for early communication of children with visual impairments and strategies for facilitating concept development in infants and toddlers with visual impairments. describe evidence-based strategies for communication and language intervention.

    4. Objectives After completing this session, participants will describe strategies for facilitating early communication and language development in infants and toddlers as they move through the seven levels of communicative competence and acquire symbolic communication. explain why some children with visual impairments may develop atypical communication and describe strategies for facilitating communication and for addressing echolalia, pronoun confusion, overuse of questions, and perseveration.

    5. Objectives After completing this session, participants will define augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) and assistive technology and describe strategies to facilitate communication in individuals who may benefit from AAC. describe the relationship of communication and language to emergent literacy—that reading, writing, speaking (augmented communication), and listening develop concurrently and interrelatedly.

    6. Objectives After completing this session, participants will describe strategies and interventions that promote communication, language, emergent literacy (narrative knowledge, vocabulary, listening comprehension), and metalinguistic development (phonological awareness, syntactic awareness).

    7. Communicative Form Communication is any behavior that an onlooker interprets as an attempt by another to convey a message. Consistent caregiver responses promote intentional communication in infants. Dunst, 1978 Prizant, Wetherby, & Roberts, 2000

    8. Communicative Function Communicative functions include Behavior regulation – regulating another’s behavior (e.g., wiggling to protest being held) Social interactions – actions that maintain another person’s attention (e.g., greetings, social routines) Joint attention – directing another person’s attention to an object or experience (e.g., a boy looks at his grandma while pointing to a toy) Dunst, 1978 Prizant, Wetherby, & Roberts, 2000

    9. Communicative Forms and VI Children with visual impairments may engage in communicative behaviors that are socially inappropriate. Families and early interventionists provide intervention to change the form of inappropriate behaviors while promoting use of appropriate forms for particular functions. For example, hair pulling (form) may be used to initiate social interaction (function). While the function may be appropriate, the form is inappropriate. Thus, the child should be encouraged to seek social interaction in more appropriate ways. Fazzi & Klein, 2002

    10. Steps for Intervention 1. Distinguish the behavior that needs to be changed (form) from the function that it serves. 2. Provide children with more appropriate forms that serve the same or similar functions. For example, in order to provide an alternative to hair pulling, the team provides the child with a Big Mack switch that plays a recorded greeting when activated. The family and early interventionist respond immediately and interactively each time the switch is activated.

    11. Recommended Practices Family-centered practices Team collaboration Appropriate functional assessment Functional outcomes within daily routines and natural learning opportunities

    12. Family-Centered Practices Treating families with respect Being responsive and flexible Sharing information that facilitates informed decision making by families Promoting family choice in program and intervention decisions Collaborating with families Mobilizing and providing family supports and resources Dunst, 2002

    13. Family-Centered Support Early interventionists should support families by addressing their concerns and priorities for their children within the context of daily routines and natural learning opportunities. Early interventionists can assist families by recognizing that caregiver-child interactions provide the foundation for language and communication, cognitive, and emergent literacy development. Dodici, Draper, & Peterson, 2002

    14. Reading Subtle Cues TVIs assist families in understanding and interpreting children’s subtle communicative cues. In order to communicate about actions, objects, and people, young children with visual impairments and multiple disabilities may use facial expressions, gaze orientation, body posture and movements, changes in muscle tone, and/or gestures. Chen, 1995

    15. Collaboration Communication interventions are most effective when a partnership exists between professionals and caregivers, and caregivers are the primary interventionists. Prizant, Wetherby, & Roberts, 2000

    16. Potential Roles of Early Intervention Team Members Families identify their concerns and priorities. TVIs can assess the impact of visual impairments on communication, language, and emergent literacy development.

    17. Potential Roles of Early Intervention Team Members Speech-language pathologists can offer information about early communication and assist in assessment and intervention planning. Audiologists are helpful in assuring that young children have normal hearing or are identified as having a hearing loss.

    18. Functional Assessment Routines-based assessments (RBAs) provide insight into families’ concerns and priorities for children’s communication and language development and guide functional interventions. Families will be more motivated to implement interventions in their daily routines if the interventions address their concerns and priorities and make it easier for the family to function.

    19. Developing Functional Goals Break large goals that the family and other members of the early intervention team identify as priorities into smaller, functional objectives. Children learn naturally from their caregivers within naturally occurring learning opportunities. Communication and language interventions should be embedded in routines.

    20. Realistic Outcomes Families sometimes identify abstract communication goals such as, “I want her to be able to describe what’s wrong when she cries.” The early intervention team can assist the parent by breaking this large goal into small, achievable steps based on the child’s current level of functioning.

    21. Functional Communication and Language Outcomes Functional communication and language outcomes promote and facilitate social interactions, promote the child’s active engagement and learning, and promote the child’s ability to function as independently as possible.

    22. Facilitating Communication in Routines To be effective, communication and language intervention for infants and toddlers should occur within social contexts in naturally occurring social routines and events.

    23. Attachment and Communication Attachment is the formation of significant and stable emotional connections between individuals, such as an infant and mother. The attachment process begins in early infancy as the child bonds with one or more primary caregivers.

    24. Secure Attachment Behaviors Crying when separated from parents Staying close by parents Expressing joy upon reunion with parents Social referencing or “checking in” Reacting to strangers

    25. Attachment and Early Communication Children who are securely attached are more likely to cooperate with their parents, actively explore their environment, build stronger relationships with others, and be involved in communication and emergent literacy events. Dodici, Draper, & Peterson, 2003

    26. Contingent Responsivity The development of attachment is related to caregivers’ ability to perceive infants’ cues and to respond quickly and appropriately (contingently) to those cues. Fazzi & Klein, 2002 Warren & Hatton, 2003

    27. Nonverbal Communication and Attachment Early in the process of language development, children’s communication may be subtle and expressed through facial expressions, eye gaze, body posture and movements, changes in muscle tone, and gestures. Chen, 1995

    28. Attentive Stillness Attentive stillness, an act of staying motionless to better attend to a situation, is a subtle nonvisual communicative behavior observed in some children with visual impairments. If the parent recognizes that the child is staying still to better attend, the parent is more likely to continue the interaction.

    29. Understanding Nonverbal Cues Learning to interpret and respond immediately and appropriately to children’s subtle behavioral and nonverbal cues (contingent responsivity) facilitates attachment and communication.

    30. Facilitating Secure Attachment Touch and hold the child. Respond to the child’s physical and emotional needs promptly and appropriately. Follow the child’s lead. Consider the child’s interests and abilities. Provide the child with choices. Play turn-taking games. Establish and maintain consistent routines.

    31. Insecure Attachment Insecure attachment can occur for a variety of reasons other than visual impairment. Parents and caregivers may have to examine their own parenting behaviors and attitudes, often rooted in childhood experiences.

    32. Concept Development and Communication As infants grow and are exposed to new experiences, they develop more concepts about themselves, their world, and other people that provide them with topics about which to communicate.

    33. Concept Development and Visual Impairments Visual impairments may affect what concepts a child develops as well as how the concepts are developed. Most children acquire many concepts incidentally through vision . Even when children use other senses to develop concepts, vision is the unifying sense that integrates information from the other senses.

    34. Promoting Concept Development To develop the concepts that are necessary for communication, children with visual impairments must actively engage in a variety of activities with people and objects, learn through naturally occurring events and functional tasks in the home and in the community (e.g., baking cookies, physically exploring a fire truck at the local fire station), and have opportunities to play. Fazzi & Klein, 2002 Ferrell, 1996

    35. Naturalistic, Evidence-Based Practices for Communication and Language Dunst and Roper identified seven naturalistic evidence-based communication practices: Increased opportunity Child-directed activities Adult responsiveness Imitation Modeling Minimal prompting Participation Dunst & Roper, 2003

    36. Naturalistic Intervention Naturalistic intervention is used to help children generalize communication skills or to teach new skills. These strategies have been found to be effective with children with disabilities who engage in nonlinguistic communication as well as children who talk. Sapp, 2005

    37. Though there are many specific kinds of naturalistic strategies, they all share the following characteristics: involve brief interactions between a child and an adult, occur in informal settings and activities, provide opportunities to learn new skills or practice skills, are based on children’s interests, have naturally occurring reinforcers, and do not affect the natural flow of the interaction. Sapp, 2005 Characteristics of Naturalistic Interventions

    38. Increased Opportunity Children are given frequent and varied opportunities to communicate. The experiences should provide children with opportunities to practice current communication abilities in meaningful and functional activities. Dunst & Roper, 2003

    39. Child-Directed Activities Child-directed activities involve following the child’s lead and modeling language. Interviews with caregivers can be used to identify child interests to increase active engagement and facilitate communication. Interactive matching requires adjusting pacing and communication to match the child’s communicative level as well as following the child’s lead. Dunst & Roper, 2003

    40. Adult Responsiveness Responsiveness involves “paying attention to a child’s cues, no matter how subtle or unconventional, and responding contingently to the child’s attempts to interact with others as a means of increasing child production of the behavior.” Dunst & Roper, 2003, p. 221

    41. Joint Attention Joint attention is a communicative act in which two or more individuals interactively attend to the same object, activity, or person. Episodes of joint attention increase children’s communication, as evidenced by behaviors such as meaningful words, pointing, shared looks with adults, and showing toys. Kasari, Freedman, & Paparella, 2001 Murphy & Abbeduto, 2005; Paparella & Kasari, 2004

    42. Responsive Parenting Responsive parenting is linked to optimal outcomes in all areas of development, including communication and language development and emergent literacy. Dodici et al., 2003 Warren, 2000

    43. Specific Interventions Based on Responsiveness Responsiveness is also incorporated in other more specific evidence-based interventions: Prelinguistic milieu teaching (PMT) Milieu language teaching techniques

    44. Prelinguistic Milieu Teaching Prelinguistic milieu teaching is an adaptation of milieu language teaching for children in the prelinguistic period that also uses the following strategies: Following the child’s lead Facilitating learning during social routines Arranging the environment Targeting individual behaviors Warren & Yoder, 1998 Warren, Yoder, & Leew, 2002

    45. Prelinguistic Milieu Teaching Prelinguistic milieu strategies include: Targeting individual behaviors Using specific verbal and nonverbal prompts Using vocal and gestural modeling Providing specific praise Linguistic mapping Using natural consequences as reinforcers Warren & Yoder, 1998 Warren, Yoder, & Leew, 2002

    46. Milieu Language Teaching Milieu language teaching procedures can be used to implement individualized language goals for young children during naturally occurring learning opportunities, involve observing a child or playing beside a child and making use of naturally occurring communication opportunities use the mand-model and incidental teaching procedures. Warren & Kaiser, 1988 Warren, Yoder, & Leew, 2002

    47. Imitation Imitation enhances communicative competence. Imitative social interactions establish the concept of turn-taking, which is the basis for effective communication. Dunst & Roper, 2003

    48. Modeling Dunst and Roper (2003) define modeling as “the provision of appropriate examples of target sounds, words, or phrases” (p. 222). Imitation and modeling can be combined to further develop communication (Paparella & Kasari, 2004).

    49. Mand-Model Intervention and Incidental Teaching Mand-model intervention is beneficial for children who rarely initiate interactions and for children who need to expand their current communication skills. Incidental teaching can address a broad range of goals. When children frequently initiate interactions and are engaged in motivating activities, responsive caregivers scaffold the child’s experiences to help facilitate the development of new skills. Sapp, 2005

    50. Mand-Model Procedure The adult asks the child a question that requires a response other than yes or no, and then waits expectantly for a response. When the child speaks, the adult expands slightly on the response and continues the interaction. Wolery, 1994

    51. Mand-Model Intervention Steps Identify communication goals. Identify times and routines that provide loosely structured activities. Ensure that the routine/activity has toys or objects that will engage the child. Allow or help the child play with the toys and objects. Play alongside the child and respond to the child’s communications. Sapp, 2005

    52. Mand-Model Intervention Steps When the child is playing and is receptive Ask a question or make a statement that will give the child the opportunity to use the targeted communication skill. After asking the question, look expectantly at the child. Sapp, 2005

    53. Mand-Model Intervention Steps When the child is playing and is receptive If the child responds with a communication behavior, expand on it. If the child does not respond, model a response at the child’s communication level and look expectantly at the child. Repeat steps 5 and 6 several times throughout the activity. Sapp, 2005

    54. Special Considerations for Mand-Modeling Children with visual impairments may not understand the facial expressions and body language of the expectant look. Cueing children by stating their name or touching them lightly on the arm may be necessary. Children with visual impairments may have difficulty playing with toys, so select toys and objects that are meaningful and that children enjoy. Sapp, 2005

    55. Incidental Teaching The adult waits for the child to initiate an interaction, then asks the child to elaborate by saying, “Tell me more” or “What about ___?” The adult further elaborates on the topic or models how to elaborate for the child. Wolery, 1994

    56. Incidental Teaching Steps Identify communication goals. Identify times, activities, and routines in which to use the procedure. Adapt activities and materials to encourage children to communicate. Be available and wait for children to initiate an interaction. Sapp, 2005

    57. Incidental Teaching Steps When children initiate, decide if the interaction offers a good teaching opportunity. Ask children for more elaborate language (i.e., the communication goal), using a simple phrase children understand such as “Tell me more,” “What about ____?” or “Use your words.” Wait for children to produce the more elaborate communication while looking expectantly at the child. Sapp, 2005

    58. Incidental Teaching Steps When children initiate If children use more elaborate language, (a) praise them, (b) expand on children’s statements, and (c) respond to the content (i.e., do what children asked). If children do not produce more elaborate statements, provide a model of the more elaborate communication, then wait expectantly for children to imitate. If they imitate, respond to the content of the communication. Repeat steps 4 and 5. Sapp, 2005

    59. Tips for Incidental Teaching Children must frequently initiate interactions for this intervention to work. Certain situations can be arranged to encourage children to initiate. Children are not going to ask for a favorite toy on a high shelf if they cannot see it. Sapp, 2005

    60. Minimal Prompting Minimal prompting is also known as a nondirective or facilitative style of interaction. Caregivers who use a facilitative style of interaction follow the child’s lead, encourage a variety of child contributions, and use nondirective prompts.

    61. Promoting Facilitative Interactions Strategies for facilitating interaction include allowing conversational lags, encouraging children to initiate 2/3 of topics, initiating topics without direct questioning, using direct questions no more than 25% of the time, and requesting clarification from children to expand the topic. Wetherby & Prizant, 1999

    62. Participation Participation is likely to increase if interventions are based on children’s and families’ motivation and preferences. Many children are motivated to interact and communicate during daily social routines. Prizant et al., 2000 Warren, Yoder, & Leew, 2002

    63. Additional Guidelines for Intervention Use comprehensive assessment results Provide activities that encourage social interactions Provide meaningful contexts for communication development Consider differences in development Model rich language Easterbrooks, 2003

    64. Additional Guidelines for Intervention Take advantage of teachable moments Develop new information that builds on previously acquired information Make language experiences fun Develop interventions that are appropriate for the child’s developmental level Use natural learning opportunities Easterbrooks, 2003

    65. Seven Levels of Communicative Competence The levels of communicative competence can be used to analyze children’s communication to facilitate scaffolding that will promote the next level of competence. Although specific strategies are suggested for each communication level, some strategies can be applied across most communication levels. Rowland & Stremel-Campbell, 1987

    66. Level I: Preintentional Behavior Children engage in behaviors in response to their internal state (e.g., hunger) without any intent. Caregivers should create a highly responsive and predictable environment to help establish intentional behavior (e.g., predictable routines). Caregivers can also develop social routines that involve turn-taking such as peek-a-boo or pat-a-cake. Rowland & Stremel-Campbell, 1987 Warren & Yoder, 1998

    67. Level II: Intentional Behavior Children intentionally engage in behaviors such as moving their bodies without the intent to communicate a message. Caregivers can help children become aware of the communicative impact of their behaviors by responding to the behaviors as if they were communications. Rowland & Stremel-Campbell, 1987

    68. Level III: Nonconventional Presymbolic Behavior Children understand that their behaviors can influence the behaviors of others and that actions and vocalizations represent people, objects, actions, and events. Caregivers should model more conventional means of communication, respond quickly and appropriately (contingently) to more conventional communication behaviors, and scaffold communication attempts. Crimmins et al., 1995 Rowland & Stremel-Campbell, 1987

    69. Level IV: Conventional Presymbolic Behavior Children develop more conventional gestures such as pointing, kissing, waving, nodding head, and begin to use intonated sound patterns to express needs similar to Level II. Caregivers can add language to the gestures to facilitate symbolic communication. Rowland & Stremel-Campbell, 1987

    70. Level V: Concrete Symbolic Behavior Children begin to pair concrete symbolic representations with specific referents in the environment, such as making the sounds of a toy car (“Vroom, vroom”) and depictive gestures (i.e., gestures that look like what they mean, such as “mine,” “come here,” and “sit”). Caregivers should add language and respond to the symbolic representations. Rowland & Stremel-Campbell, 1987

    71. Level VI: Abstract Symbolic Behavior In abstract symbolic communication, children use abstract symbols or one-word utterances to communicate. Caregivers can expand on the child’s comments. For example, when the child says “Ball,” the caregiver can say, “Yes, the big ball.” Rowland & Stremel-Campbell, 1987

    72. Level VII: Formal Symbolic Behavior Children begin to understand the semantic and syntax rules of formal language. They combine two or more words to communicate, rearrange words to change the meaning of a sentence, and ask questions to communicate more sophisticated intentions. Caregivers can facilitate language development by providing increased opportunities to practice and refine their language, asking open-ended questions, modeling descriptive language, and expanding on children’s statements using more complex syntactic structures and new vocabulary. Rowland & Stremel-Campbell, 1987

    73. Differences in Communication Some children with visual impairments display differences in their communication and communication development. Any distinction between the development of children with visual impairments and that of typically developing children should be interpreted as differences, not as deficits. Warren, 1984

    74. Transactional Interactions and Communication Communication and language development result from reciprocal relationships and interactions between children and the caregiving environment. The responsiveness of caregivers influences the child’s language and communication development and vice versa. Children with visual impairments may not have access to environmental information that would prompt them to communicate.

    75. Transactional Interactions and Communication Children who do not initiate interactions appear unresponsive, and caregivers may not be motivated to interact with them. Children with visual impairments often use subtle and atypical communicative cues that may not be easy to interpret. Consequently, parents may not respond to communicative attempts, prompting children to use crying or inappropriate behaviors to secure attention, or children may simply stop trying to communicate.

    76. Caregiver Responsiveness Responsive caregivers read children’s cues and respond contingently, adapt the environment so that it is accessible and stimulating, reinforce appropriate communication and language, use rich, developmentally appropriate descriptions of the focus of children’s attention and relate those topics to the child’s experiences, and avoid exclusive use of directives.

    77. Echolalia Echolalia has two forms, immediate and delayed. Delayed echolalia may occur days or weeks after children hear the words or phrases. Researchers now recognize functional uses of echolalia. It may be used for turn-taking verbal completion protesting calling providing information as directives declaratives yes responses requests Prizant & Rydell, 1993

    78. Developing Echolalia Into More Advanced Language Antecedent strategies Change the environment Change the communication styles of the child’s partners Provide relevant language as a model Consequential strategies Respond to the communicative intent while providing a simple model of appropriate language Provide positive reinforcement for appropriate language

    79. Strategies for Children With VI and Echolalia Provide additional environmental information to expose children to rich language and concepts. Expand on the child’s language to model the next step in language use. Don’t talk constantly—give children time to listen and process. Include a third person in the conversation to serve as a model of appropriate language.

    80. Pronouns All children initially make mistakes in using pronouns. Children with visual impairments may experience prolonged difficulty mastering correct use of pronouns. Adults should model appropriate use of pronouns. Erin, 1986, 1990 Fazzi & Klein, 2002 Harrell, 1992

    81. Questions Children with visual impairments often overuse questions in their conversations. When children use questions inappropriately, model more appropriate language use. Avoid asking too many questions. Help children listen to the answers to appropriate questions. Erin, 1986, 1990 Fazzi & Klein, 2002 Harrell, 1992

    82. Perseveration Children with visual impairments often perseverate on topics of interest. Additionally, children with visual impairments often do not express interest when new topics are introduced. Anderson et al., 1993 Fazzi & Klein, 2002

    83. Decreasing Perseveration Strategies for decreasing perseveration include involving children in daily activities to build concepts and interests, modeling the expression of feelings and helping children put their feelings into words, and redirecting children when they interrupt or inappropriately change the topic. Anderson et al., 1993 Fazzi & Klein, 2002

    84. Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) AAC is the use of devices or techniques to facilitate children’s expressive or receptive communication.

    85. Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) When children have delayed speech, AAC can increase overall communication and speech production. AAC includes unaided modes of communication such as body language, gestures, sign language, and facial expressions; and high- or low-tech devices that require children to use their bodies to activate a tool for communication. Bozic et al., 1995 Reinhartsen et al., 1997 Rowland et al., 1995

    86. Assistive Technology Assistive technology refers to any item, piece of equipment, or product system, whether acquired commercially or adapted, that is used to increase, maintain, or improve the functional capabilities of children with disabilities (IDEIA, 2004). AAC is a type of assistive technology.

    87. Expressive Communication and AAC According to Rowland and Schweigert (1998), children with visual impairments and multiple disabilities may communicate expressively through vocalizations and speech, motor responses and gestures, tangible symbol systems, or high-tech systems.

    88. Tangible Symbols A tangible symbol is a type of concrete symbol—a symbol that has a direct relationship to the referent. Symbols are used to represent objects, activities, people, locations, food, etc., and can be used to refer to something that is distant. Tangible symbols can be three dimensional (objects) or two dimensional (pictures). Rowland & Schweigert, 1998

    89. Tangible Symbols Tangible-symbol systems should have a clearly understood relationship to the activity, object, person that they represent; be permanent; be easy to manipulate; be easy to select with minimal motor skills; be identifiable by touch; and be used within daily routines and activities to help individuals who cannot speak make choices and communicate with others. Rowland & Schweigert, 1998

    90. High-Tech Systems High-tech systems use electronic features in combination with textures, objects, words or phrases, pictures, or letters to make it easier for children to send messages to others or to make it easier for others to understand the communication. vary in input, how the child uses the system to communicate; and in output, the manner or form in which the message is conveyed to others. Rowland & Schweigert, 1998

    91. Receptive Communication and AAC AAC can also be used to facilitate receptive communication in children with visual impairments and additional disabilities. Tactile cues and calendar systems may be used to help children who may not understand speech develop another method of receptive communication. Rowland & Schweigert, 1998

    92. Tactile Cues Tactile cues include manual signing, touch cues, and object cues. All of these cues are used to help individuals who do not understand language anticipate events and activities. Rowland & Schweigert, 1998

    93. Sign Language Various forms of sign language can be used with children who have visual impairments. Children with multiple disabilities can use sign language to communicate simple needs, such as “more.” Prickett, 1995

    94. Sign Language Sign language can be adapted for children with visual impairments by adjusting the distance between the signer and the child, slowing the speed of the signing, reducing or increasing the size of movements, and using tactile signing in the child’s hands. Prickett, 1995

    95. Touch Cues Touch cues are used in early receptive communication development and are made directly on children’s bodies. Touch cues should be used consistently by all individuals who interact with the child. Touch cues immediately precede an event and cue the child to the activity. Children should eventually anticipate an activity in response to touch cues. Rowland, Schweigert, & Prickett, 1995

    96. Object Cues

    97. Picture Symbols Picture symbols are used for expressive and receptive communication by children with low vision. Picture symbols can be used one at a time. For more advanced communication, several pictures can be used to communicate a need or express simple sentences. Color, contrast, size, distance, angle, and complexity of the picture symbols should be considered for children with visual impairments.

    98. Calendar Systems Use objects that are related to daily activities to help children anticipate events and activities, thereby facilitating receptive communication May use a sequence of objects arranged on a shelf or in a box that represent the sequence of activities Help children to transition from one activity to another Help children to understand the order of their day Help children begin to acquire concepts about time

    99. Assistive Technology For very young children, switch toys are often effective means of choice making, an early form of expressive communication. Simple one- and two-switch systems may serve as simple high-tech methods of AAC and allow children to call or greet someone, make a choice, or indicate “more” or “finished.” Bozic et al., 1995 Reinhartsen et al., 1997 Rowland et al., 1995

    100. Assistive Technology: Recommended Practices   Using toys with voice output and simple switches to help children communicate wants and needs Using picture or object systems to select activities or to prepare children for transitions Using simple switches to greet family or peers Adapting writing implements with easier grips so children can create drawings or “letters” Using switches with animated toys to assist in the development of cause-and-effect concepts Stremel, 2005

    101. Communication and Emergent Literacy “Listening, speaking, reading, and writing abilities (as aspects of language—oral and written) develop concurrently and interrrelatedly, rather than sequentially.” Teale & Sulzby, 1986, p. xviii Language provides the foundation for reading and writing.

    102. Emergent Literacy and Literacy: Whitehurst and Lonigan Whitehurst and Lonigan found relationships between oral vocabulary size and phonological awareness in younger readers without formal reading instruction (preschoolers) and oral vocabulary and language comprehension in older readers (1998). that the relationship between oral language and reading is indirect and is mediated primarily by phonological awareness (2002).

    103. Sénéchal’s Theory of Literacy According to Senechal et al., literacy develops from three separate, but related, categories of skills Emergent literacy Conceptual knowledge Procedural knowledge Language Metalinguistic skills Sénéchal, Lefevre , Smith-Chant, & Colton, 2001, p. 448

    104. Conceptual Knowledge Emergent conceptual knowledge about literacy includes knowledge about the acts of reading and writing, knowledge about the functions of literacy, self-perception of learning to read, and emergent reading in context. Sénéchal et al., 2001, p. 448

    105. Procedural Knowledge Emergent procedural knowledge about literacy includes preconventional spelling in different situations, letter knowledge, letter-sound knowledge, and word reading (with help). Sénéchal et al., 2001, p. 448

    106. Language and Metalinguistic Skills Constructs Language Narrative knowledge Vocabulary Listening comprehension Metalinguistic Skills Phonological awareness Syntactic awareness Sénéchal et al., 2001, p. 448

    107. Communication and Emergent Literacy Sénéchal and colleagues theorized that children’s conceptual knowledge of literacy is related to children’s language, whereas children’s procedural knowledge is associated with phonological awareness and reading acquisition; and vocabulary development and phonological awareness are closely related. Sénéchal et al., 2001

    108. Facilitating Communication and Language Development to Promote Emergent Literacy Shared storybook reading Storybook preview Storybook sounds Conversation Dialogic reading Decontextualized dialogue Listening games Play

    109. Shared Storybook Reading Mothers use richer and more varied language during shared reading than during other daily routines. Young children who actively participate in storybook readings both comprehend and produce more words. Active participation involves pointing to illustrations of novel words, labeling novel words, answering questions, and discussing the story. Sénéchal & LeFevre, 2001

    110. Storybook Preview Storybook preview is the shared exploration of the content of a book without consideration of the storyline. Children are given the opportunity to label or describe the illustrations of interest, ask questions, and make comments to increase narrative knowledge and vocabulary. The caregiver’s role is to identify and scaffold children’s communicative attempts. McCathren & Allor, 2002

    111. Storybook Sounds and Rhymes Promote phonological awareness and listening comprehension During shared storybook reading, point out rhyming words or initial sounds. If children are interested, make up little games to reinforce phonological concepts. Developing rhyming stories together can also increase phonological awareness. Rhymes in songs and poetry also facilitate the awareness of sounds in speech McCathren & Allor, 2002 Parlakian, 2004

    112. Dialogic Reading Shared-reading technique in which the adult assumes the role of an active listener and the child learns to become a storyteller In dialogic reading, the caregiver asks questions, adds information, expands language, and provides encouragement through praise and repetition. Whitehurst et al., 1988 Whitehurst & Lonigan, 2002

    113. Conversation Children learn new words from participating in meaningful conversations among children and between children and adults. When conversing with children, do not limit vocabulary to words they already know. Children learn new words readily. Bardige & Segal, 2004

    114. Conversation Among Children During conversations with other children, children can: learn new words, practice the words they know, exchange ideas and information, issue orders and invitations, negotiate sharing and turn taking, and plan and act out imaginative play scenarios. Bardige & Segal, 2004

    115. Rare Words and Open-Ended Questions Many young children enjoy learning rare or unusual words, such as dinosaur names or the names of storybook and cartoon characters. Open-ended questions challenge children intellectually and facilitate conversation by encouraging children to tell their stories. Open-ended questions can’t be answered in just a few words. Bardige & Segal, 2004

    116. Decontextualized Dialogue

    117. Decontextualized Dialogue Decontextualized dialogue can be used to expose children to concepts and experiences that they do not have direct access to, teach children words that indicate time, help children remember events, help children ask or respond to open-ended questions, and help children learn to problem solve. Bardige & Segal, 2004

    118. Facilitate listening comprehension and phonological and syntactic awareness through   listening games, storybook sounds, rhyming games (e.g., rhyming in songs and poetry, creating rhyming stories), syllable games, and modeling rich and complex language.

    119. Play Children learn through play. Children learn the most from activities and experiences they enjoy. Adults can promote exploration, conversation, and imagination during play to help children become avid learners. Bardige & Segal, 2004

    120. Settings for Conversation and Play Collaborative play areas encourage conversation among children: Sandboxes Forts, playhouses, lofts Theatrical stages and puppet stages Bulletin boards “Block areas” with blocks for building imaginary worlds Bardige & Segal, 2004

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