Tuesday, October 29, 2013

Teaching Your Child to Say /s/

We all know what a lisp is – but did you know there are 2 types of lisps?                                  

1.  INTERDENTAL LISP:  The child is putting his tongue between his teeth, so his ‘S’ sounds turn into ‘TH’ sounds.  How do you correct it?  Tell your child to put the tongue back behind those teeth where it belongs!  Of course, it’s a little more complicated than that.  The tongue should actually be up just above the top teeth, almost touching that bony ridge where the teeth meet the skin.  It’s called the Alveolar Ridge.   To teach them to put their tongue up there, see the ‘Sprinkler Method’ below. When I first begin to correct interdental lisps, I sometimes turn it into a game of ‘Catch the Snake’.  If their tongue peeks out between their teeth as they say a word beginning with ‘S’, my hand turns into a ‘Snake Catcher’ and pretends to grab it.  (Make sure they know this is a game!  Making funny expressions and noises as you pretend to grab it and miss always helps!)  It doesn’t take long for them to keep their tongue back in their mouth.  Then you can fine-tune the placement with the ‘Sprinkler Method’ below.

2.  LATERAL LISP:  The child’s tongue it too flat and loose, and air is escaping off the sides of the tongue rather than shooting straight out the front.  It sounds kind of slushy.  You can remind the child to keep the air coming forward ‘skinny and straight’, as you teach correct placement using the ‘Sprinkler Method’ below.

THE SPRINKLER METHOD
Here’s a fun way to teach ‘S’ that the very knowledgeable Jill Andrus at USU taught me:
Have the child make a ‘T’ sound.  Usually kids will put their tongue in the correct place (almost
touching the alveolar ridge) when they make the ‘T’ sound.  Tell them we are going to be a sprinkler.  Hold your hand out in front of you as if it’s the top of a sprinkler head.  Say ‘T’ repeatedly about 1 second apart as your hand ‘sprinkler’ jerks to the right each time.  When it gets all the way to the side, it’s time for the sprinkler to hurry back to the front.   Say the ‘T’ sound as fast as you can as your hand comes back to the front, until it blends into an ‘S’ sound.  The idea is to teach the child that the ‘S’ sound is made in the same place as the ‘T’ sound – except you don’t touch the alveolar ridge completely and the air escapes out the front.

Once they get the hang of where the ‘S’ sound should be made, you can drill it by having them say words beginning with ‘T’ and then ‘S’ quickly:  ‘Tam, sam, tam, sam, tam, sam’.   They shouldn’t have time to change their tongue position between ‘tam’ and ‘sam’, and so that can also help them to keep their tongue in the right place.

Don’t expect your child to be an expert ‘S’ maker overnight!  It takes some time for them to change their old tongue habits during everyday speech.  But with practice, they’ll eventually get it right!

Good luck!

Teaching Your Child to Say ‘L’

Letter LMany children struggle with the ‘L’ sound.  They will often substitute a ‘W’ sound instead.  You can teach your child to produce the ‘L’ sound by putting her tongue up behind her top teeth, where they meet the bony ridge of tissue called the Alveolar Ridge.  It’s helpful for the child to use a mirror when you are first teaching the ‘L’ sound.  Have her hold her tongue there for a second, then remove it and try again.  Once she has gotten used to putting her tongue in the right place, tell her to turn on the sound.  You could say, “Hum while you hold your tongue there,” and model it for her. 

 After she’s mastered that, tell her it’s time for the tongue to push off.  Show her how your tongue pushes against the ridge as you slowly say ‘La, la, la’.  

 Sometimes the kids go overboard when they are first learning to make the ‘L’ sound, and their tongue flips all the way out of their mouth.  That’s okay at first, but eventually encourage them to keep that tongue inside where it belongs.  Explain to them that if they keep their tongue up there close to the alveolar ridge, it will be easier and faster to say their words. Make sure they eventually get rid of the mirror when they practice so that they learn to put their tongue in the right place by ‘feel’.

Learning the ‘L sound will take lots of practice, but eventually it will become second nature!

Good luck!

Friday, September 13, 2013

Why Does My Child Stutter?

 

There are many reasons why a child begins to stutter:


Pre-disposing factors (genetics)
Developmental factors (learning new things)
Environmental factors (stressful situations, etc.)

You may wonder what you can do to help the situation.  Here are some tips I learned from the very knowledgeable Anne Elsweiler at USU:
It helps to decrease the rate of speech and length of utterances.
It helps to reduce the complexity of sentences and the difficulty of words. 
It helps to give the child more time to respond and make sure family members don’t interrupt or provide negative responses. 
It helps to slow down a fast-paced schedule.
Fluency disrupters to avoid:  rapid turn-taking, competition for speech, fast rate of speech, long complex sentences.

Remember these children are fluent more of the time than they are disfluent!
 
It can be helpful to remember the following points: 

All people/kids have some disfluent speech.
 •It’s not anything that the parents have done.
Stuttering is not caused by parental behaviors. 
Stuttering can be caused by many things. 
A family history of stuttering indicates a higher risk.
There are things that can trigger symptoms.
Increased learning demands can trigger speech problems such as stuttering.
Developing children have many increased vocabulary, cognitive, physical and social demands which compete for the brain's resources. 
The preschool years are a time of increased demands in all these areas so that’s why most kids begin to stutter between the ages of 2-4. 
75-80% of kids recover spontaneously, but for those who may not, early intervention is very beneficial.
Certain environmental factors or stressful events may also trigger the stuttering if there are pre-disposing factors.
There may be some differences as far as where the language is processed in the brain which may slow down speech signals and auditory feedback.  This means that language may take more time for those people who stutter. 

 
More tips later on how to help your child practice fluent speech. 

Thursday, September 5, 2013

Regular Past Tense Verbs

These last 2 weeks our language groups have been working on regular past tense verbs.  We have learned that these verbs change to past tense by adding an -ed at the end.  We've also learned that verbs that end in 'y' usually have a spelling change:  the 'y' changes to an 'i' and then we add 'ed' after that.  The exception is that words that have a vowel before the 'y' -- like 'play' -- keep the 'y'.

Some regular past tense verbs are:

wait, love, walk, call, paste, wave, pound, smile, laugh, hope, file, fix, like, serve, miss, slice, bake and work  (There are lots more!)

Some past tense verbs that change the 'y' to 'i' are:

cry, try, fry, hurry, worry, tidy, and reply

Your child can practice using regular past tense verbs at home!  Here are links to some homework pages you can use:

 speaking of speech 1
 speaking of speech 2
speaking of speech 3
speaking of speech 4

It's good to practice using these verbs in a sentence, because that's the way your child will use them in real life!

Have fun!

Mrs. Hurd