Each week I provide you with some of my ideas about turning autism around, so if you haven’t subscribed to my YouTube channel, you can do that now and join the thousands who already have.
A few months ago, I also started a weekly Turn Autism Around podcast, so you can check that out or just search “turn autism around” on iTunes. I have several podcast episodes about language which you might find helpful. So before we get started with today’s topic of articulation, I just want to give a disclaimer. I’m not a speech pathologist. I am a behavior analyst and the author of The Verbal Behavior Approach. And I have worked collaboratively with lots of speech pathologists over the past two decades, first with my son and then with many of my clients to help me to understand articulation better. So I’m certainly not an expert, but I do want to give you some articulation tips that you can implement to help kids speak more clearly and understand how to collaborate for kids with really troublesome articulation.
Many young children when they first learn to talk have poor articulation. Their words are not clear and they may have trouble saying certain consonants like R’s, F’s or blends, especially ones like “sh” or “bl”. So words with consonants and blends may be really hard for parents to understand. It is completely normal for typically developing kids to have certain consonants and blends come in later. In chapter 6 of my book, The Verbal Behavior Approach, I have a whole chapter on non-vocal to vocal and getting kids from not talking to talking. In this chapter, I briefly address articulation issues that I faced with my son, Lucas, and with other kids early in my career.
There are many parts of the world where there’s not a speech pathologist available. You might be on a waiting list and there needs to be a lot of collaboration between everybody on the team, especially the parents. So let me just go over my general system and it might help you to help a student or your own child. So, number one words are words that are clear to a stranger or if a person had their back turned and was holding up pictures, they’d be able to understand what the child was saying without looking at what the picture was. Number one words are more likely to be one syllable words. I did a video blog on this, called, the best way to get your child talking so you may want to check that out as well. So number one words are usually one, maybe two syllables in length, and they are clear.
What I’ve learned also over the years from other speech pathologists, like Rose Griffin, who I did a podcast episode with at marybarbera.com/10, and Dr. Barbara Esch, is that we shouldn’t be focusing on words. Rather, we should be focusing on syllables. Kids who are starting to learn to talk or talk more, that have autism often have a lot of errors and we need more practice on the good words. So that’s why I really encourage teams, parents, and professionals to get number one words on a list, preferably an alphabetized list, such as an Excel sheet or a Google sheet. The number one words we should know and the number two words we should know and we should know what’s missing from that word or how it sounds right this second. It’s super important to keep number one words really fluid.
It’s just a really common sense way to try to improve articulation. The most important thing is that everybody needs to work as a team, because language happens all the time, not just for an hour a week or a half an hour a day. We want to be making sure that everybody knows what the words are that the child can say and work on improving those all the time. In summary, parents, professionals, and school teams need to be on the same page and keep the bar really high for the number one words, and move those number two words over as quickly as possible. Improving articulation requires this major team effort. So I hope that this has helped you to begin thinking about how you might be able to identify number one and number two words and work together to get those words clear. Wherever you’re watching/reading this, leave me a comment, give me a thumbs up and share this video with others who might benefit. And for more information and to sign up for a free online workshop, go to marybarbera.com/workshop and I’ll see you right here next week.