i can early talk: enhancing communication and language training

54
I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

Upload: francisco-tattersall

Post on 01-Apr-2015

218 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing

Communication and Language Training

Page 2: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

2Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Programme for the day

• Welcome, housekeeping, outline of the day• Unit 1. What are speech, language and

communication needs (SLCN)?• Unit 2. Identifying children with SLCN• Lunch• Unit 3. Approaches to support children with

SLCN to access the curriculum.• Unit 4. Working in partnership• Target setting and evaluation.

Page 3: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

3Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Activity 1: G.O.A.L

Write down the following:

Give: what are you bringing to the training (experience, desire to learn more etc)?

Outcomes: what do you want to achieve at the end of this programme of learning?

Anxieties: what are you concerned about?

Looking forward: what are the positives that you want to take from the training?

Page 4: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

4Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Learning outcomes

• know about speech, language and communication development in the early years

• be aware of approaches used in identifying and addressing speech, language and communication needs

• have an understanding of how to adapt the early years environment to support children with SLCN

• understand and develop ideas around your role in assessment and collaborative practice

• agree three personal communication targets, including subsequent evaluation dates for implementation of these in your workplace.

Page 5: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

5Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

• Prime area: communication & languageListening & attentionUnderstandingSpeaking

• Prime area: Physical development Health & self care

• Prime area: personal, social & emotional development Self-confidence & self-awareness

Early Talk & how it links with EYFS 2012

Page 6: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

6Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

• Why do we communicate?• What skills do we need?• What would be the impact if we couldn’t

communicate?

Spend 2 minutes talking to the person next to you about 1 of the following: • Your journey here todayor• 1 thing you want to do before you dieor• 1 thing you like about your job.

Unit 1 Warm up: Discussion

Page 7: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

7Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Speech is the sounds and sound combinations that are put together to make up words.

LanguageUnderstanding language (also known as comprehension or receptive language).Talking (also known as expressive language).

Communication gives us a way of sharing feelings and emotions; a tool for giving and receiving information.

Speech, language and communication – a reminder!

Page 8: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

8Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 1: Communication chain

Speech sounds

Talking

Words

Sentences

Grammar

Pragmatics

Hearing

Listening

Understanding

Thinking (processing)

Planning

Remembering

Image adapted from Google images

Page 9: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

9Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

speech

language

communication

Speech, language and communication are different aspects of the interactive process.

It is useful to think about these different aspects – they are multi-faceted and multi-layered and all are necessary for effective communication.

Speech, language and communication

Page 10: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

10Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Why do children need speaking and listening skills?

Speaking and listening skills enable children to:• understand what is said• express themselves clearly• share their feelings verbally• make their needs known• use their language as a vehicle for learning• make friends and join in.

Page 11: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

11Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 1. Activity 2: Sorting game

•In the envelope are different aspects of : speech language communication.

•In groups, have a go at sorting each aspect into the categories.•There is not always a right answer, and some may fit comfortably in more than one category.

Page 12: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

12Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Sorting activity

Speech

Speech sounds

Clear speech

Fluency

Tone of voice

Stress on words

Intonation

Using pitch

Volume

Language

Vocabulary

Organised sentences

Use of grammar

Narrative structure

Understanding meanings

Verbal reasoning

Inference

Understanding grammar

Communication Adapt communication

style to suit situation and audience

Listen

Take conversational turns

Understand non-verbal communication

Use language to persuade, negotiate, predict and

account for consequencesUse language to enable conflict resolution and

collaboration

Conversations

Page 13: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

13Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 1. Activity 3: Conversation role play

Have a conversation in your groups for 5 minutes.You need to have the conversation in the role given on the card.

After 5 minutes conversation, discuss with the person next to you what you think might have been going on with this person’s communication.

What aspects of speech, language and communication were they struggling with?

Page 14: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

14Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Speech, language and communication needs (SLCN)

Any of these areas can be affected on their own or in combination: speech difficulties, like saying one sound

instead of another and/or omitting certain sounds

language difficulties, like not using necessary words, or lack of understanding

communication difficulties, like not looking or listening well.

Interaction and communication is then affected, as is access to social interaction and learning opportunities.

Page 15: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

15Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Impact

•Attainment •Behaviour •Emotional development•Self esteem•Social skills•Literacy •Learning

Page 16: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

16Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

How do children learning more than one language develop SLC skills?

Skills develop by the same means whatever

the language.

They always follow a developmental pattern

but patterns vary depending on the

language.

Bilingualism is a recognised advantage.

Mixing words from both languages in a sentence is a normal

part of bilingual language

development.

Becoming conversationally fluent in a second language

usually takes around 2 years.

Encourage parents to talk to their children in

the language they would naturally use at

home.

With thanks to The Communication Trust for this model

Page 17: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

17Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Key message

Through understanding relevant terminology and categories relating to speech, language and communication development together with the impact of SLCN, we can begin to identify children with SLCN, and consider targeted interventions to support them in settings.

Page 18: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

18Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 2. Identifying children with SLCN

Activity 1: fact or fiction• 10% of all young people have speech, language and

communication needs (SLCN).• 5–7% of all young people have SLCN as a primary

difficulty.• At least 50% of young people with behaviour,

emotional and social difficulties have undiagnosed SLCN.

• Children do better if you make them work and talk together.

5. Most teachers are confident in their ability to teach speaking and listening skills.

6. Young people who are slow to develop language are likely to be slow to develop reading skills and written language.

Page 19: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

19Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

SLCN fact or fiction activity (cont.)

7.Children with weaker vocabularies are more likely to learn new words from incidental exposure than children with larger vocabularies.8.Talk and social interaction among children play a key role in children’s social development and learning.9.Less able richer children overtake more able poorer children by the age of 5.10.Children from economically deprived backgrounds are at considerable risk of language delay.11.By age 4 an average child would have experienced almost 45 million words.12.The acquisition of a first language is the most complex skill anyone ever learns.

Page 20: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

Key message

Children with SLCN have major disadvantages to overcome in the classroom and they will suffer educationally unless their needs are recognised and understood. (Lindsay and Dockrell, 2000)

Page 21: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

21Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Risk factors: nature

• Family history of speech, language and communication needs (SLCN)• Primary diagnoses:

• sensory impairment• genetic conditions e.g. Down’s syndrome• other medical conditions e.g. cerebral palsy• cognitive impairment

• Pre - or perinatal difficulties (e.g. low birthweight, pre-term and birth trauma)• Upper respiratory tract infections and otitis media effusion (glue ear).

Page 22: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

22Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Risk factors: nurture

• Lower socio-economic background*• Physical/mental illness in carer (e.g. maternal

depression, alcohol/ substance misuse)• Carer’s communicative behaviours:

• reduced responsiveness (parent responds less often)• reduced contingency (parental responses less sensitive to baby’s lead)• less adaptive interaction (rate and complexity of carer’s talk and use of intonation)

• Parenting practices, e.g.:• wallpaper TV• dummy and bottle use. * Linked to communication delay but not Speech Language Impairment (SLI)

Page 23: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

23Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Risk factor?

Are bilingual children more likely to have communication difficulties?

NoChildren learning to communicate who are exposed to more than one language at a time may take longer to achieve milestones but they are no more likely to be affected by specific language difficulties than a monolingual child.

Bilingualism in itself is not a communication impairment and bilingual children will, in time, typically master both languages as proficiently as their peers.

Page 24: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

24Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 2, Activity 3: Identifying children with SLCN

What would you observe if a child has SLCN?

How do you identify if a child has SLCN?

Page 25: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

25Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

• Disengaging from nursery activities

• Being angry, frustrated or disaffected

• Increasingly anxious behaviour

• Being more aware of differences between themselves and their peers

• Being isolated / withdrawn from peers

• Being highly skilled at masking their difficulties

• ‘Acting up’ to gain friends / respect from their peers.

Challenges within the curriculum for children with SLCN (cont.)

Page 26: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

26Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

The range of SLCN experienced by children

Children with SLCN may be:

• unable to fully understand the content of an activity

• given instructions that they cannot follow

• unable to use language to demonstrate to others that they have/have not understood what has been said to them

• unable to use language to express their needs

• unable to use language in interactions with peers and adults.

Page 27: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

Challenges within the curriculum for children with SLCN

• Understanding the content of a lesson / activity

• Poor understanding of instructions and ability to follow them

• Using language to demonstrate they have understood

• Expressing their needs or lack of understanding of a topic

• Using language to support interaction with peers and thus develop social skills.

Page 28: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

28Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Case studiesUsing the checklist in your participant book, work through your case study and identify:•What each child’s strengths and interests are•What areas of communication children might be struggling with•How would this affect their learning?

Unit 2. Activity 4: Identifying children with SLCN

Page 29: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

Challenges within the curriculum for children with SLCN

• Communication and language

• PSED

• Physical development

• Literacy

• Maths

Page 30: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

Summary

• As the whole curriculum is delivered through the medium of language, children with SLCN will struggle unless their needs are understood and appropriate strategies put into place to meet their needs.

• There may be specific effects on the child’s communication, language and literacy skills. In addition mathematical development and other areas of the curriculum may be affected to varying degrees.

Page 31: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

31Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Lunch

Jonothan Wright
is this slide really necessary?
Page 32: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

32Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 3. What do you do to support children with SLCN?

In groups - discuss what you do already to support children with SLCN, thinking about:

• The role of the adult and the strategies they use• How you organise the environment• Any additional support you give

Page 33: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

Ways

Desire Opportunities

Unit 3. Activity 2 – how do you facilitate this?

Page 34: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

34Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

• Physical environment

• Role of the adult

• Creating opportunities for interaction

Strategies to help children access the environment & the curriculum

Page 35: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

Strategies to address the environment - physical

• Visual timetable

• Labelling

• Arrangement of room

• Designated areas

• Seating arrangements

• Support at tidy up time

• Activities to suit a range of ages.

Page 36: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

36Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Talking togetherBeing equal partners in communication

Attention and listeningSupporting a child’s understanding of language and activities

Level of languageAdapting adult languageto fit the child’s level

Keep on commentingReinforcing and extendinga child’s language development

How? How? How? How?

Listen more than you talk Remove distractions Keep language simpleComment on what is happening

Involve children in conversation

Look at the child you are talking to

Give one instruction at a time

Give children the right language model

Use visual cues – gestures, signs and pictures

Say the child’s name – touch them gently to help them focus

Check understanding Repeat language

Emphasise turn taking Keep to a routine Re-phrase information Wait!

Value what children sayPraise good listening and attention skills Offer choices

Role of the adult: TALK techniques

Page 37: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

37Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Teacher:

‘If you have had your milk you can go and

play. If you haven’t made your hat for

tomorrow’s party you can make one now

with Sally.’

Unit 3. Activity 3: Scenario 1What could you say?

Page 38: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

38Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 3. Activity 4: Language environment - Scenario 2

Teacher:

‘Right then Eli, stand up and tell me your

address.’

Eli:

‘I’m a dress.’

Page 39: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

39Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Supporting peer interactions

• Peer talk:

• Encourage and support talking amongst peers

• Encourage communication in all its forms

• Group carefully

• Create opportunities for talking

Page 40: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

40Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 3. Activity 5: What strategies are being used?

I CAN T.A.L.K. video

Page 41: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

41Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 3, Activity 6: Creating opportunities for interaction

In groups discuss how you can create opportunities for children with SLCN to get the most out of:•Circle time•Small group times•Role play•Outdoor play•Times of conflict

Page 42: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

42Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Conclusion for Unit 3

A range of strategies and approaches can be used to support children with SLCN. These involve adaptation to the social, language and learning environment.

Practitioners need to be aware of their roles and responsibilities to children with SLCN and be able to monitor their effectiveness.

Page 43: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

43Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 4. Activity 1: Working in partnership

In groups identify who else you would work with to ensure the best outcomes for children with SLCN

Page 44: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

44Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Parents as Partners

Parents: • Know their child best• Gain information about the child from the

parent• Keep them informed about what is

happening in the nursery• Home / school diaries, regular meetings,

sharing IEPs or play plans.

Page 45: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

45Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 4. Activity 2: Using your toolkit

What are the strengths that parents have?

What are their needs?

How can you use resources in your toolkit to help parents know more about language and communication?

Page 46: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

46Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Target Setting

Initial assessment

Evaluation and

modification

Implementation

Set target/s

Page 47: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

47Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Target Setting

• Targets need to be precise, measurable and tailored to a child’s needs - SMART

• Establish baselines so that progress can be demonstrated

• Carry out regular observations & target review to ensure that targets are achieving desired outcome.

• If not then targets should be revised

• Involve children and parents.

Page 48: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

48Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Unit 4. Activity 3: Setting targets

•Using the learning cycle model on slide 46, choose a case study and think of two targets for this child.•What strategies would you use to help them achieve this?•Who else would be involved?

Page 49: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

49Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

• Local speech and language therapy service – referral, assessment and intervention.

• Local children’s centre – advice and sharing ideas.

• Talking Point – website providing advice and tips for parents and professionals www.talkingpoint.org.uk

Where to seek support

Page 50: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

50Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

• Talk to your baby – information for parents and professionals www.literacytrust.org.uk/talktoyourbaby

• Early Support Programme – advice and support booklets available in England but web access UK www.earlysupport.org.uk

• I CAN – advice leaflets for parents and professionals www.ican.org.uk

• I CAN Help enquiry service – parents/practitioners can talk to a speech and language therapist about a child’s development: 020 7843 2544.

Where to seek support

Page 51: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

51Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

• Afasic – organisation primarily for parents but advice leaflets available for parents and professionals www.afasic.org.uk

• Royal College of Speech and Language Therapists – information about speech and language therapy www.rcslt.org.uk

Where to seek support

Page 52: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

52Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Working with parents in partnership & accurate target setting will inevitably result in the best outcomes for children with SLCN. This approach will also improve support for parents and the practitioners working with both the child and their family.

Conclusion

Page 53: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

53Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Next steps... Target setting

• Write down at least one action under each of the three topics.

• Find a buddy

• Agree a date for a progress check.

Page 54: I CAN Early Talk: Enhancing Communication and Language Training

54Enhancing Communication: Unit 1

Online evaluation

To complete course evaluation and obtain attendance certificate, visit:

www.ican.org.uk/validation