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Language

Helping toddlers with their first words – mix it up and make them useful (the words, not the toddlers)!

17 February 2014 by David Kinnane Leave a Comment

A couple of years ago, in a trendy Inner West cafe, I spied a Very Committed Dad sitting across from his terribly young daughter.  They could barely see each other over the small mountain of branded flashcards in the middle of the table.  Dad scooped up a deck’s worth, and shuffled them like a croupier.

My super-speech-senses activated.  I couldn’t resist eavesdropping:

Said Dad:

Ruby, say…

Tiger

Lion

Crocodile

Ostrich

Zebra

The list of wild animals went on and on.  Then came fruit, and shapes, and numbers, and finally body parts.  All the favourites you see in lots of colourful products targeted at parents, stroke survivors and speech pathologists, alike.

I rolled my eyes and went back to sipping my Long Black and ignoring the Norah Jones CD.  Why?

Consider: what did Dad’s words have in common?  Two things:

1. They were all nouns, which couldn’t themselves be combined to produce meaningful phrases and sentences.

2. Unless planning a safari on a tropical island inhabited by shape-shifting surgeons, they were not the most useful set of words for a young child to know.

What should Dad have been focusing on?

Van Tatenhove has done lots of research on the normal language development of children.  Her findings (2005) tell us that the focus for new vocabulary in children with developing language should be on high frequency, re-usable vocabulary that can be combined and used across a number of events and activities needed throughout your life.  These words are sometimes referred to collectively as “core vocabulary“.

Like most great research, the answer seems obvious once you ask the right question!

But which words to teach?

  • Van Tatenhove has looked at this question in the context of which words to include in communication devices for young children with disabilities.  She recommends words from a variety of word classes, including pronouns (I, me, you, it, mine, he, and she); verbs (do, put, is, make, let, get , want); negation (no, not, don’t); prepositions (with, for, to, in, on); question words (what, where); modifiers (gone, more, small, all) and generic locations (here, there, away).
  • In 2003, a Dr Banajee and colleagues identified the top 22 words used by typically-developing toddlers.  For a late-talking child, these may be a good place to start – unless he or she also has a speech sound disorder impacting on expressive language – a complicated and entirely different topic for another day!

Banajee’s words:

1. all done/finished

2. go

3. help

4. here

5. I

6. in

7. is

8. it

9. mine

10. more

11. my

12. no

13. off

14. on

15. out

16. some

17. that

18. the

19. want

20. what

21. yes/yeah

22. you

Certainly all much more useful than teaching your child the words necessary to describe this:

 i_007

Images source: http://tinyurl.com/mohbzqm

Related articles:

  • Late talkers: how I choose which words to work on first
  • Why I tell parents to point at things to help late talkers to speak
  • “He was such a good baby. Never made a sound!” Late babbling as a red flag for potential speech-language delays
  • Power in knowledge: child language risk factors
  • Are language development and motor development related?
  • 6 principles we follow when assessing toddlers for language delays and disorders
  • FAQ: which action words should I teach my toddler, and how?
Banter Speech & Language Banter Speech & Language
Banter Speech & Language is an independent firm of speech pathologists for adults and children. We help clients in our local area, including Concord, Rhodes, Strathfield and all other suburbs of Sydney’s Inner West.

Banter Speech & Language is owned and managed by David Kinnane, a Hanen- and LSVT LOUD-certified speech-language pathologist with post-graduate training in the Spalding Method for literacy, the Lidcombe and Camperdown Programs for stuttering, and Voicecraft for voice disorders. David is also a Certified PESL Instructor for accent modification.

David holds a Master of Speech Language Pathology from the University of Sydney, where he was a Dean’s Scholar. David is a Practising Member of Speech Pathology Australia and a Certified Practising Speech Pathologist (CPSP).

Filed Under: Expressive Language, FAQ, Language Tagged With: Child's language, first words, high frequency words, vocabulary

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