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R. Owens, 5 th Edition Chapter 2: Language Impairments. Harold Johnson Michigan State University September 11, 2009. Study Question: What constitutes a language problem? Language Problem:
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R. Owens, 5th EditionChapter 2: Language Impairments Harold Johnson Michigan State University September 11, 2009
Study Question: What constitutes a language problem? • Language Problem: • Definition: any behavior that consistently impedes an individual to understand, or be understood, i.e., communication breakdowns • Course “Q&A” • Additional Student Responses: • Kjl;kj
Owens: language problems due to an individuals difficulty with one or more of these... • perceive 'x‘ • attend, respond & anticipate 'x‘ • use symbols • use syntax • interact & communicate with others
Study Question: What, beyond the presence of a disability, are the causes of language problems? • Student Responses:
Owens: Language problems within and across disabilities: • Mental Retardation/Intellectual Disability • 1. language problems common...frequently cause behavior problems • 2. Table 2.2 p. 28, common language characteristics • 3. difficulty with 'presupposition' • 4. utterances are shorter, simpler and more concrete • 5. restricted vocabulary • 6. inappropriate social behavior during interactional exchanges, i.e., problems with “register” shifts • 7. difficulty in knowing which interpersonal behavior to attend to and which to ignore • 8. difficulty recalling learned information • Student’s experiences in interacting with such individuals?
Language Learning Disability • 1. has normal or near normal intelligence • 2. exp. difficulty in learning/using symbols • 3. six major categories: motor; attention; perception; symbols; memory; emotion • ...Note: problems are due to perceptual, vs. sensory • 4. frequently associated with hyperactivity [ADHD] • 5. emotional and behavioral problem occur frequently • 6. demonstrate difficulty w/ the 'give-and-take' of conversational exchanges • 7. p. 36, Table 2.5 - Language characteristics of children with language learning disability • 8. organization of learned information is often inadequate for efficient retrieval/use
Specific Language Impairment • ...defined as "significant limitations in language functioning that cannot be attributed to deficits in hearing, oral structure and function, or general intelligence." p. 41 • ...demonstrate difficulty in: • 1. learning language rules • 2. register shifts for different contexts • 3. vocabulary development • 4. accomplishing desired conversational goals + maintaining, vs. shifting topics • 5. poor social skills • 6. inconsistently use situational and linguistic information to decode meaning • 7. p. 43 - Table 2.8 - Language characteristics of children with specific lang. imp.
Autism Spectrum Disorders • demo both hyper and hyposensitivity to stimuli • ...includes Asperger's syndrome...characterized by lack of linguistic or cognitive disorder, average, or above average intelligence, and the inability to understand rules of social behavior, plus often display a very limited range of topical interest • pragmatics and semantics elements of langauge are the most impacted • p. 53, Table 2.10 - Lang characteristics of children with ASD
Brain Injury • language impact determined by the site of the injury • p. 56 - Table 2.11 - Language characteristics of children with traumatic brain injury • ...often found to be unable to see relationships, make inferences and solve problems
Child Abuse & Neglect (CA/N) • types of neglect and abuse: • physical neglect - abuse • emotional neglect - abuse • sexual abuse • p. 59, Table 2.13 - Language characteristics of children who are neglected and abused • Deaf Education “Community of Learners Concerning CA/N” • Explore & discuss
Children who are deaf/hard of hearing (d/hh) • Common Language Characteristics • Variables • When the child lost their hearing • The degree and type of hearing loss • The age at which they began to receive early intervention services and appropriate amplification • The age at which they began to have consistent and meaningful access to effective language models, either spoken or signed • The presence of any additional disabilities • The degree of parental involvement, understanding, and acceptance of the child’s differences • The quantity, quality, and diversity of enjoyable, age appropriate interactions the child experiences • The level of expectations for the child to succeed • The quality of the child’s PreK-12 educational experiences
Children who are deaf/hard of hearing (d/hh) • Common Language Characteristics • Patterns: Receptive & Expressive • Less vocabulary • More concrete language • Restricted sentence structures • Limited conversational sophistication • Inadequate communication repair strategies • Poor reading skills • Fewer opportunities and reasons to use and develop sophisticated language