The weekend doctor
By Brenda Waltz, M.S. CCC-SLP
Speech-Language Pathologist
Julie A. Cole Rehab & Sports Medicine
Speech delay is a broad term used for children who begin speaking later than usual. Each child is different and will learn speech and language skills at his or her own rate. Below is a speech and language guideline typical for children ages 1-3 years:
1 year: Most children begin speaking at approximately one year of age. A child’s first words usually consist of “mama,” “dada” and other nouns such as pet names, foods or toys. Children can wave goodbye, play pat-a-cake, understand “no” and follow simple directions.
1.5 years: Most children begin using 10-20 words, including names of people. They also begin recognizing pictures of familiar people or objects, pointing to their eyes, nose and toes, and humming or singing simple songs.
2 years: Most children have a vocabulary of around 300 words and use 2-3 word sentences. They begin referring to themselves by name, carrying on a “conversation” with themselves and dolls, and naming people and objects in pictures. Additionally, children begin listening to stories with pictures more attentively and can remain with an activity for 6-7 minutes.
2.5 years: At this stage, most children have a vocabulary of 450 words. They can tell others their first name, use past tense and plural nouns and speak to other children as well as adults. Further, children now understand the difference between “big” and “little” and can match 3-4 colors, answer “where” questions, and hold up fingers to tell someone their age.
3 years: By now, most children have a vocabulary of nearly 1,000 words and use 3-4 word sentences. They can match primary colors and name at least one color, understand the difference between night and day, and comprehend time concepts such as “yesterday,” “summer” and “lunchtime.” Children at this stage can remain attentive during an activity for 8-9 minutes, and they can usually sing songs.
If your child appears to be behind according to these benchmarks, he or she may be experiencing speech delay. If you suspect this, contact your child’s provider.
You may be referred to a speech-language pathologist for speech therapy. During speech therapy sessions, speech-language pathologists use play strategies to help children develop speech and language skills. Speech-language pathologists can also provide you with ideas on how to practice speech and language development at home with your child, such as:
• Read colorful books to your child regularly, preferably every day
• Use short sentences (1-3 words long) when speaking with your child
• Talk to your child about what you are doing
• Talk to your child about what he or she is doing
• Sing songs or say nursery rhymes with your child
• Imitate and identify sounds in your surroundings with your child
• Look at your child when he or she talks to you
• Praise your child’s speaking effort
Ask your provider today if speech therapy is right for your child.
Stories Posted This Week
Friday, November 22, 2024
- Ticket and livestream info for Bluffton Pirates v. Patrick Henry football
- Service of thanks at Trinity Evangelical Lutheran
- Pirate girls basketball beats Hornets in McDonald’s opener
- 100+ voices in Bluffton's Handel's Messiah chorus
- Pirate Worcester named top district defender
- BVHS receives Level 7 achievement in ‘Most Wired’ survey
Thursday, November 21, 2024
- McDonald’s Holiday Tournament, Thursday, November 21
- 2024 Fall Festival in pictures: At the Schumacher Homestead
- Fairy I. Parkins was postmaster of Benton Ridge
- Council committee and residents discuss ADUs, best and worst case scenarios
- BPL hosts Open Crafts and Game Space, November 26
- Women in Business meet November 21
Wednesday, November 20, 2024
- Bluffton Beavers sports roundup, Nov. 13-19
- ODOT prepping for first snow of the season
- Mason named OBL 2024 Banker of the Year
- October 2024 land transfers in Bluffton school district
- November chamber meeting explores member news, Blaze plans and flag etiquette
- Bluffton EMS by the numbers: October 2024
- Children left unattended in running vehicles can lead to abductions
- Icon search function goes from 0 to 30
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
- Tickets and streaming information for Nov. 22 Pirate football playoff game
- Spirit Bus for November 22 football playoff in Findlay
- Tea Bag Exchange & Tasting at BPL, November 21
- Letter: University students learn about Fair Trade
- Join volunteer crew for 2024 Ream Display-Blaze of Lights setup
- Village of Bluffton asks for updated utility billing contact information
Monday, November 18, 2024
- Dorothy P. Moser operated Moser Electric
- Multi-agency active shooter drill to be held at Apollo
- Adopt-a-Family for Christmas via Bluffton Food Pantry
- Pirate football to play Hamler Patrick Henry at Findlay
- The "Brice" Presbyterian Church cornerstone
- Pirate football to face Patrick Henry in region finals