Csd 605: Topics in Speech and Language Disorders



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CSD 605: Topics in Speech and Language Disorders


Fall, 2006

Kamhi


Th 5:30-8:20

Course Objectives
Phonology

Students should be able to:




  1. Perform an oral mechanism evaluation

  2. Use broad and narrow transcription

  3. Compare frameworks/theories of phonological development/disorders

  4. Describe the major stages of normal and disordered speech-sound development

  5. Identify factors related to normal/disordered speech-sound development

  6. Assess the speech sound system of children using a variety of tools

  7. Analyze and interpret assessment information

  8. Develop an intervention plan using a variety of intervention techniques


SLI
1. Demonstrate knowledge of frameworks of language disorders, definitional, and subtyping issues.

2. Identify causal factors and linguistic deficiencies associated with SLI.

3 Demonstrate knowledge about the various theoretic perspectives and principles that guide intervention and be able develop an intervention plan to target specific language objectives.
Fluency


  1. Demonstrate knowledge of the nature and symtomotology of stuttering.

  2. Identify causal factors associated with stuttering.

  3. Develop an intervention plan to target beginning, intermediate, and advanced stuttering in children, adolescents, and adults.



Schedule of Events




Topics Readings




August




17 Course Overview, Definitions BW—Chs.1-4

Articulatory phonetics Smit, Ch. 1


Review of phonetic transcription
Theoretical Perspectives BW- Ch. 4

Kamhi, 2005


24 Development BW-Ch. 5

Nittrouer, LSHSS, 2002, 237-257

Velleman & Vihman, LSHSS, 2002, 9-24

31 Asssessment: Phonetic and phonologic analyses BW-Ch. 6-7

Stimulability testing, intelligibility Smit- Chs. 2-4

Ingram & Ingram, LSHSS, 2001, 271-284

Developmental Apraxia Hall, LSHSS, (2000), 169-181

Forrest & Morisette, JSHLR, 1999, 187-195

Masterson (on reserve)

Kwiatkowski/Shriberg, 1998, AJSLP, 27-38
September
7 Principles of Intervention Treatment goals Tyler (in Kamhi & Pollock)

Phonetic errors BW- Ch. 8


Smit- Chs. 6-7
14 Phonemic errors BW—Ch. 9

(Cycle approach, minimal-maximal pair) Smit- Chs. 6-7

  1. Frameworks of CLD Paul, Ch. 1


28 Guest lecture
October


  1. Causal factors Paul, Ch. 4

12 SLI Reed, Ch. 5

Kamhi, 1998, LSHSS

Leonard, 1998 (book)


19 Principles of Intervention Paul, Ch. 3


  1. Targeting specific language structures/forms

Aux/cop, spatial prepositions, questions,

Complex sentences
November
2 Nature of Stuttering Guitar, Chs. 1-5
9 Treatment of incipient stuttering (childhood) Guitar, Chs. 9 & 10


  1. Treatment of intermediate and advanced Guitar, Chs. 11 & 12

Stuttering (adolescents and adults)


Recommended Reading
Bauman-Waengler, J. (2004). Articulation and phonological impairments: A clinical focus (2nd ed). Boston: Allyn & Bacon.
Guitar, B. (2006). Stuttering: An integrated approach to its nature and treatment. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins.
Kamhi, A., & Pollock, K. (2005). Phonological disorders in children: Clinical decision making in assessment and intervention. Baltimore: Brookes.
Paul, R. (2005). Language disorders from infancy through adolescence (2nd ed.). St. Louis: Mosby.
Leonard, L. (1998). Children with specific language impairment. Cambridge, MA: MIT

Other Readings

Most of the readings listed are in ASHA journals, primarily AJSLP or LSHSS. These journals can be found in the library and on reserve. The Treatment and Resource Manual for SLP by Froma Roth and Colleen Worthington is a good resource for therapy activities.



Course Requirements

1. 3 Reaction papers—one on each disorder type dealing with a theoretical issue or causal factor. They are due the class period after the reading is assigned so that you can incorporate class discussion into your reaction. (15%)

a. Brief summary of article.

b. Reaction—Did you find the information important, interesting, confusing, relevant to practice, too theoretical? Relate to class discussion if possible.

c. Most important and most muddy point

2. Case study on a child with a speech or language problem or person who stutters. Should look like a diagnostic report with background information, developmental history, diagnosis, assessment information, treatment history, treatment plan, goals, and procedures, and prognosis. (25%).


3. Oral Presentation demonstrating treatment approach. Grading will be based in large part on how “engaging” the presentation is. Role play and videos are a good way to present therapy information. (20%)

Topics
Oral motor therapy: what is it and is it effective in improving speech

Treatment approaches (traditional-Van Riper, cycles, minimal contrast/maximal contrast, language based). Present approach and research that addresses its efficacy.

Dialect variation/ bi-lingual

Developmental apraxia: Is it truly a separate disorder? How is it different than a severe phonological disorder? How is treatment different?

Phonological disorders in special populations: cleft palate, HI.

Aux/cop


Spatial prepositions

Questions

Complex sentences
4. Take-home final exam. (40%)

Example of Case Study Sections for Phonology

(speech sample and analyses are not required)


Background and Related Information


  1. Developmental history

  2. Perceptual abilities (acuity/discrimination)

  3. Oral/structural mechanism

  4. Expressive/receptive language abilities

  5. Social/environmental factors

  6. Attentional/motivational behaviors

Most of this information can be obtained from the clinical file. If there is no information on language abilities, you may want to give a norm-referenced language test, such as the TOLD-P, Preschool Language Scale, and the Preschool CELF. Information about social and attentional behaviors should be based on the interactions you have with the client during the term. The information in this entire section can be presented in about 2-3 pages. From this information, one should have a good sense of whether the child’s problem is limited to speech or whether other aspects of behavior are deficient.


Speech Sample


  1. Administer a standardized articulation test (e.g., Goldman-Fristoe, Fisher-Logemann, APP, etc.)

  2. Obtain a 50 utterance sample of connected speech. Broadly transcribe at least 25 utterances or a minimum of 100 different words.

  3. List words from articulation test and conversational sample alphabetically according to the target word. Put phonetic transcription of word alongside target word. Use “dash” convention to indicate if the word preceded another word (e.g., dog-), followed a word (-dog) or was between two words (-dog-). Circle imitated words.


Speech Analyses


  1. Phonetic inventory (initial, medial, final position)

  2. Stimulability-- is the child stimulable for sounds not produced?

  3. Syllable structure analysis

  4. Percentage consonants correct (PCC)

  5. Substitution analysis (omissions, substitutions)

  6. Phonological patterns

  7. Severity and Intelligibility (see Bleile and Shriberg et al. 1997, JSHR, 708-723)

  1. General summary of speech system. Include a comparison of single-word vs. connected speech.

The information in this section represents the “meat” or essence of this project. For each section, you should summarize the findings from the analysis and indicate how discrepant the child’s performance is from normal. Stated somewhat differently, each section should include a descriptive summary of the analysis and some interpretation of the analysis. The actual analysis should also be turned in.


Diagnosis/Prognosis


  1. Discuss the factors that impact on the child’s speech system (e.g., genetic, language, structural, motor, perceptual, social, etc.)

  2. What is the likelihood this child will have reading difficulties?

  3. What is the long-term prognosis for the child in terms of academic/career achievement?


Remediation Plan


  1. What are the treatment targets, short- and long-term goals for the child?

  2. Describe the general approach you would use and why.


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