CYPOP 24 and Unit 301: Support children and young people’s speech, language and communication...
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Transcript of CYPOP 24 and Unit 301: Support children and young people’s speech, language and communication...
CYPOP 24 and Unit 301:Support children and young people’s speech, language and communication skills
Learning Outcome 1
Understand the importance and the benefits of adults supporting the speech, language and communication development of children and young people
Pre-unit activity
• Arrange to watch an activity in your setting for a short period of time; approximately 2-3 minutes
• You may find a structured observation sheet useful for this
• Make a note of the activity and who was involved• Write down as much as you can of the language of
the adult and the language of the child or young person
• Audio recording will help you to do this accurately but you will need appropriate permissions
Pre-unit activityFollow up and reflection
• How many questions did the adult ask?• Who said the most?• How long were the child’s sentences?• How well did the child understand?• What helped support speech, language and
communication?
Why is it important to support and extend children and young people’s speech, language and communication development?
• Speech, language and communication skills are vital building blocks for other areas of their development
• Speech, language and communication are central to children and young people’s ongoing development into adulthood
• The impacts for children and young people who have difficulties with speech, language and communication are many and varied
Speech, language and communication skills continue to be central to development and learning
Speech, language &
communication
Play
Social
Emotional
Thinking
Problem-solving
Behaviour
Learning
Reading & writing
Activity 1a The positive effects of adults supporting speech, language and communication
Speech, language and communication Play Learning Social development Literacy Behaviour Emotional development Self confidence Thinking and problem-solving
Activity 1b How can you support and extend children and young people’s speech, language and communication?
Different ways to
support & extend SLC
What affects speech, language and communication development? Research evidence shows…
• The more they hear, the more time their parents spend talking with them and the more types of words they are exposed to, the more children use
• Children seem to develop strong language skills when parents ask open-ended questions, ask children to elaborate, and focus on topics of interest to the child. Responding to what the child is talking about and having familiar routines also promote shared understanding.
• Conversations about how people feel and how that affects what they do, are important in learning social communication skills
• The amount of language children hear is important
• What adults say to children is also important
• Co operative interactions are very important
Discussion point 1
• The evidence on the previous page is from a study looking at the way parents supported their children's speech, language and communication development.
• Which of the points do you think are also relevant for people who work with children and young people and why?
Activity 1c Quick quiz
1. When can you support speech, language and communication?
2. When should you extend speech, language and communication
• Any time – all the time!• In everyday routines and conversations• In all activities, play and social times• Set up specific opportunities/ activities• 1:1 and in groups• When children are talking with you or
with other children
• Use your judgement, based on knowing the child and what they need
• Where you can and it’s appropriate
Key principles
• Listen to and value the contributions of children and young people
• Consider their level of development – where they are now and where next
• Model good communication• Make language learning fun• Work with parents and carers• Include speech, language and communication in your
planning• Make the most of opportunities throughout the day• Keep an eye and make a note
Key principles – children and young people learning more than one language
• The principles of ways to support and extend children’s speech, language and communication apply to just the same children and young people learning more than one language
• Bilingualism is an asset• Home language has an important and continuing role• As with developing a first language, understanding is in
advance of talking. • Language diversity should be acknowledged and celebrated• The demands on children and young people who are learning
English as a second language should be recognised and considered
Ways to support and extend speech, language and communication
• There are 5 areas in this section, looking at some of the different ways adults support and extend speech, language and communication1. Supporting speech, language and communication of babies2. Supporting speech, language and communication of young
children3. Some ways to support speech4. Some ways to support language – adapting and scaffolding5. Some ways to support communication
• You’ll need refer to different age ranges in your portfolio
Supporting the speech, language and communication of BABIES
• Attachment is crucial to support communication development
• Give babies time to process and respond• Opportunities for early communication – eye contact,
sound-making, turn-taking• Using ‘parentese’• Rhymes and songs• Shared attention• Running commentary for every day events
Activity 1d - Supporting the speech, language and communication of YOUNG CHILDREN
Learning to Talk, Talking to Learn has 10 top tips:1. Get the child’s attention first2. Make learning Fun3. Use simple repetitive language4. Build on what the child says to you5. Demonstrate rather than criticise6. Imitate the child’s language7. Use all the senses to teach new words8. Give the child time to respond9. Be careful with questions10. Use the full range of expression
Activity 1d - Supporting the speech, language and communication of YOUNG CHILDREN
• Choose a technique. Discuss with a partner your thoughts about this technique
• If you work with young children, which of the techniques do you currently use?
• Choose one technique you haven’t used before and make a plan to use it in your setting.
• When you have tried this out, discuss with your group how you used the technique and how effective it was and make a comment in your portfolio
Ways to support and extend children and young people’s speech, language and communication
There are many ways to support and extend children’s speech, language and communication. Adults can support and extend them:
In everyday routines and conversations In activities and events that are happening anyway In specifically planned activities In 1:1, pairs and groups When children are talking with you or with other
children
Supporting and extending children’s SPEECH – a few ideas
• Develop awareness of sounds in the environment• Encourage good listening skills• Play around with rhymes• Make sound pictures or have a sound table, with
pictures or objects which start with the same sound
• Model the right response rather than correcting their speech – “I taw a tat” – “you saw a cat? How exciting..!”
Transfer into practice 1
Think of an activity which already happens in your setting.
Think of one way you could support a child’s speech through that activity
Think of how a you could suggest a parent could support their child’s speech
Supporting children and young people’s LANGUAGE
• Language includes talking and understanding.
Adapt your language Scaffold their language
Activity 1e - Adapting your language
In small groups, listen to and have a look at the following information and the question which follows it. (Don’t worry, it’s meant to be complicated!) Then think about the five questions below
• How easy is it to understand?• What makes this the case?• Could you answer the question?• How ‘good’ was this question?• How did you feel about the activity?
Activity 1e - Adapting your language
Epistemology is generally characterised by a division of two competing schools of thought: rationalism and empiricism. The rationalists sought to reconstruct critically the total of human knowledge by the employment of such ‘pure’ reasoning from indubitable axioms. The empiricists took direct acquaintance with the ‘impressions’ of sense-experience as their bedrock of infallible knowledge
Q1: Was rationalism one of the schools of thought?
Adapting your language – key things to think about
Adapting your language
How much you talk
How long your
sentences are
How complicated your sentences
areHow many
new or complex
words there are
How much time
children have to
think about what you
say
What spaces there are for children to
talk
How many and what questions you ask
Adapting your language - questioning
Too many questions and certain types of questions can inhibit language and communication
Children may not join inThey only give answers
May say lessQuality may be lower
Fewer opportunities to talk with others
Less opportunity for exploring and expanding
thinking and language
•Try to comment, not question•Think about question types
Activity 1f - Adapting your language- Exploring different ways of talking with children
This is from a research study looking at 5 differentways of supporting and extending talking.• For each one, consider…• How well does the approach support and extend the
child’s language?• How could the adult improve their questioning or
interaction?• How often do you currently use each approach in
your talk with children?
Interaction style What was child’s language like?
Does this work?
Why/ why not
Enforced questions
Two-choice questions
Wh questions
Personal contributions
Phatics
Activity 1f
1 Enforced repetitions
Child says: ‘biscuit’Adult says: ‘say “please can I have a biscuit”Child says: ‘biscuit’
2 Two choice questions
• The adult asks the child a question where there are only two choices – this includes either yes/no answers or ‘forced alternatives’
Adult: ‘Is that an elephant?’Child: ‘no’ORAdult: Is that an elephant or a giraffe?Child: ‘Giraffe’
3 – ‘wh’ questions
• Adult asks a question starting why, what, when etc
Adult: ‘Who’s that?’Child: ‘daddy’Adult: ‘where’s he going?’Child: ‘shop’Adult: ‘why?’Child: ‘car’
4 – Personal contributions
• Adult avoids asking questions, but gives their personal contributions around something that the child is interested in.
Adult: I went to the park at the weekendChild: Me too!Adult: I played football with RosieChild: I played on the swingsAdult: oh, I’m a bit too big for the swingsChild: not me, I can go so highAdult: so high you touch the clouds…Child: even higher…
5 - Phatics
• Adult tries to say nothing with any ‘content’, just “makes the right noises”. They try to avoid questions and take the child’s lead
Adult: Hey, look at that…Child: It’s a princessAdult: aha…Child: she’s gonna get eaten by the dragon Adult: oh no, scary …Child: but she doesn’t taste so goodAdult: yuk…Child: she tastes like slugsAdult: disgusting – even for a dragonChild: yeah, cos he likes marshmallows
Activity 1f– answers – which work well?
Interaction style
What was child’s language like?
Does this work?
Why/ why not
Enforced questions
No different The adult’s language was too complex for the child to copy
Two-choice questions
Only one word answer
The questions are very restricting
Wh questions One word – directly answers question
Can make child passiveUseful if child understands question words
Personal contributions
Longer sentencesMore involved
Child was interested and had time and space to make contribution
Phatics Child says more than adult
Lots of space for child to leadAdult leaves options open for childStarts to sound like a story
Scaffolding children and young people’s language
Scaffolding describes how adults provide support to enable children to achieve and develop their skills. There are many ways to do this; some examples are:
• Adding to, or extending what a child says• Modelling examples• Encouraging children to rehearse and practise• Breaking tasks or skills down into smaller steps• Teaching and helping children to learn new words• Providing structures for giving information or telling
stories• Using visual prompts or props
Some examples of extending a child’s talking
Child/young person says• There’s a bus• I can see a big spider• I can’t play football today.
My leg hurts
Adult says• Yes, it’s a big bus• Me too – he’s enormous• Oh, you can’t play football
because your leg hurts
Some examples of extending children and young people’s language - vocabulary• Teach children new words: Use all the senses – real objects if you can, or pictures if not Talk together about its shape, colour, texture Talk together about what it does, what it’s similar to, what it
means Talk together about how this links to what they already know
– give examples and the context Talk about the structure of the word – how many syllables it
has, what it starts with Help them to use it. Reinforce the new word regularly
Vocabulary
GuavaStarts
with ‘g’2
syllables
FruitGrows in
hot countriesShaped
like a pear
Orange colour
Pips inside
You eat it
It’s juicy
It smells, tastes, feels like…
Supporting children and young people’s COMMUNICATION
Communication skills can often be taken for granted. Some ideas:
Model and demonstrate good communication skills Make skills explicit Talk about and practise communication for different
situations, events and purposes Give children and young people clear roles when working in
groups – eg the summariser, the note-taker, the introducer Ensure there are well structured opportunities for children
and young people to communicate with each other Learning through play
Discussion point 1.1 Working with parents, carers and families
Why is it important to work with parents, carers and families in supporting a child or young person’s speech, language and communication?
Think of three ways you could effectively work together
Working with parents, carers and families some ideas
Ways to work with parents
Share ideas, advice,
information
Talk about how their child is progressing
Listen to their ideas and concerns
Invite them to come and watch
communication in action
Offer workshops, sessions or
events
Model ideas and examples
in practice
Portfolio task 1.1
• Prepare some leaflets or posters, showing how adults can support and extend children and young people’s speech, language and communication development. Make sure you include general key points as well as any for the specific age groups
• Include information on the positive effects of this support too.
Transfer into practice
• Learning outcome 2 looks at how to put the ideas from Learning outcome 1 into practice.
• Choose one of the methods you have found out about and try it out in your setting. Make a note of the context, activity and child you were working with. Note or record (with the appropriate permissions) a short section of your interaction and consider:
• What you did and said:• What the child or young person did and said:• What the good parts of this method were:• What you might do differently next time:
Learning outcome 2
Be able to provide support for the speech, language and communication development of children and young people
Reflection on transfer into practice
• Work in small groups to share experiences of trying out different methods of supporting and extending speech, language and communication in your settings.
• Note down the key points from your discussion
Supporting speech, language and communication development
What adults do
How the environment
supports communicatio
n
How children and young people are
involved
How parents and families are involved
How policies and ethos
reflect speech, language and communicatio
n
Activity 2a – considerations for supporting speech, language and communication
• When you choose ways to support children and young people’s speech, language and communication, it is important to consider a child or young person’s:
Specific needsAbilitiesHome languageInterests
• In pairs, choose one of the points and discuss why it is an important consideration. Share your thoughts with other groups to cover all four.
Planning how to support speech, language and communication in your practice and in your setting
• Speech, language and communication can be supported through everyday routines, in conversations and activities which are happening anyway as part of your setting
• Specific activities, events and games can also be planned to support speech, language and communication skills in particular
• Speech, language and communication are so much part of what we do with children and young people, that it can sometimes be taken for granted
• Including speech, language and communication in your planning keeps it at the forefront of your mind and firmly in your practice
Planning should include 1
• How will the physical environment support speech, language and communication?
• What are the roles and responsibilities of staff in supporting speech, language and communication?
• How are children and young people’s views included in what you do?
• How can parents, carers and families be involved in supporting speech, language and communication too?
• It is also important to consider what training and development are needed to best support children and young people’s speech, language and communication
Planning should include 2:
• The child, young person or group you are working with
• Their age
• Any resources you would use
• The adults involved
• The activity and its aims
• The methods you will use and why you are choosing them
• How you will evaluate what you did
Evaluation should include:
• Thinking about what you did, saw and heard
• Thinking about how well you felt this worked
• Finding out how others thought it worked – this would include the children and young people involved, maybe colleagues and parents or carers
• Thinking about what you might do differently next time
Portfolio task 2.1
• Make a plan showing examples of how you will support speech, language and communication in your practice. This could either be through planning specific activities, through how you will change your everyday practice, or both
• Demonstrate at least three different methods of supporting and extending speech, language and communication in your setting
• Explain how effective you thought your support was, using your own evaluation and feedback from others
• You could complete this activity through using a reflective diary if you wish
Learning Outcome 3
• Understand how environments support speech, language and communication
The environment
• Communication friendly
• Communication central
• Involvement• Views
• Role• Skills,
knowledge• Development
PhysicalPolicies
and ethos
Child/ young personAdults
Policy and ethos
• It is important for settings to value speech, language and communication and to see it as a central part of what they do with children and young people
• If speech, language and communication are well reflected in the policies and ethos of a setting, it can support effective practice
The physical environment
• Opportunities for supporting need to happen and be effective
• Clear planning to develop the environment
• Actions to take this forward
Space Noise levels
Light Visual support
Opportunities Resources
Activity 3a – key factors for a communication supportive environment
• You could do this activity individually, in pairs or small groups
• Use one of the recommended resources
• Highlight the key factors it describes which provide a supportive speech, language an communication environment
• Share what you have found with another person, pair or group.
Adults in the environment
• Learning outcomes 1 and 2 have focused on the ways in which adults can support speech, language and communication
• The roles of adults working with children and young people are important, as well as their skills and knowledge. Identifying training and development needs and then meeting these is also important
• Parents, carers and families should also be considered
The child or young person
• Children and young people are at the centre of our practice in supporting speech, language and communication development
• It is essential to ensure they are fully involved and there are ways and opportunities effectively used to gain their views within your setting
• This applies to all children and young people, including those who are very young or who have very limited spoken communication.
Transfer into practice
• Thinking of the key factors of an environment which supports speech, language and communication, what does your setting currently do well?
• Identify two things which could be introduced, improved or extended
• How could you go about doing this in your setting?
Portfolio task 3.1
• Make a plan for an environment which effectively supports speech, language and communication. You could make a drawing or perhaps use photographs of an existing setting (with appropriate permissions if necessary)
• Using relevant evidence, label your plan with the key factors which will support speech, language and communication
• Include some information which explains the importance of the environment in supporting speech, language and communication
Learning Outcome 4
Be able to recognise, and obtain additional support for, children and young people who have speech, language and communication needs
Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN)
• Most children follow the expected pattern of development for their speech, language and communication at the expected times. Some, however, do not. These are described as having Speech, Language and Communication Needs - SLCN
The importance of recognising children and young people with SLCN
• In your group, discus why it is important to recognise children who may have speech, language and communication needs. Try to include the following ideas in your discussion.
Impact
Early identification
Intervention, help or support
Recognising children and young people who may have SLCN
• Recognising children and young people is based onHaving a good understanding of the ages and stages of speech,
language and communication developmentObserving and recording what a child can do, as well as the things
they may find difficultConsidering speech, language and communication if a child or
young person is having difficulties in ANOTHER area of their development or life
Getting the views of the child, young person and their parentsUsing tools and resources to help you Sharing any concerns with others
Children and young learning more than one language
• Children and young people do not have SLCN simply because they are learning more than one language. Additional language learning is not an indicator for SLCN, nor are limited English skills, where the home language is developing as expected
• However, some children who are learning more than one language will have SLCN.
This is because developing speech, language and communication skills is difficult for them whatever the language and they would have difficulties whether they were learning 2 languages or one
It is really important to identify these children's needs, but it can be quite difficult
Every child or young person’s SLCN will be different and individual
May be in one, more
or all areas of
SLC
Will vary in terms
of the level of
need and the
impact
SLC may be the only or primary need OR part of
another condition or need
Skills may be delayed
or disordered/
atypical
May be short-term
OR persistent
Activity 4a George and Karim
• Read the written profiles of these two boys.• Decide, for each, whether you think their needs
lie in speech, language or communication or perhaps a combination
• From their profiles, is there anything else which you think is particularly interesting about either boy
Activity 4b Ben and Jermaine
• Read the written profiles for both of these boys. One boy’s needs are part of a wider disability; one boy’s difficulties are only to do with speech, language and communication at this point
• Decide which is which and discuss why• At the moment, Ben’s needs have not yet been
recognised. Why is it important for Ben’s needs to be recognised as soon as possible?
Indicators of SLCN
Recognising SLCN – two possible approaches
Ages and stages resources• Check to see if the child is at
the stage you would expect for their age
• If not, see what stage they are at in the different areas of speech, language and communication
• Look at ways to help and seek advice and support
Indicators checklists• Using your knowledge and
observations of the child or young person, highlight the behaviours on the checklist which the child/ young person shows
• Seek advice and support on ways to help
Activity 4c – recognising SLCN
• Working in small groups, choose one ages and stages resource and one checklist
• Discuss the resources in your group. Think about what they cover and how they might work to recognise if a child has speech, language and communication needs
• Are there particular advantages or disadvantages for each?
• Which do you think might work best in your setting and why?
Raising concerns
• If you work with young children, you may be the first professional to have concerns. Raising these effectively will support early identification and intervention, which are crucial to support children’s development and minimise the potential impacts
• However, this may also be the case if you work with an older child or young person.
• Many children and young people have had their speech, language and communication needs MISSED completely
• Lots of other children and young people may have been identified as having a DIFFERENT need
• For some, their difficulties only really come to light in
primary or secondary school
Raising concerns and gaining additional support
Raising concerns and getting help
Activity 4d - Processes and procedures
• In pairs, discuss the processes and procedures in your setting for raising concerns and accessing additional support for children and young people with SLCN
• What were the similarities and differences between the processes?
• Based on your learning from this unit, are there ways that you feel the processes and procedures could be improved? If so, what would you suggest and how might this be implemented?
Additional support for children's SLCN
Who might offer additional support?
In your setting (e.g. You, language
lead, senior colleague, SENCO)
Outside your setting(e.g. Speech and
Language Therapist, SLT or teaching
assistant, advisor)
What might that additional support be?Changes to the environment
Using interventions, approaches or strategies
Further assessmentSpeech and Language Therapy
Programmes designed by a specialistWorking with other adults & support staff
Training or information for staffWork with parents
Portfolio task 4.1
• Prepare a briefing for a new member of staff explaining the processes and procedures to follow if there are concerns about a child or young person’s speech, language and communication in your setting
• Include information on the range of SLCN that there may be and indicators which may suggest a child or young person has SLCN
• Explain the processes and procedures for your setting to access additional, specialist support for children’s SLCN in your setting
• Your briefing could be written or verbal. You may find it useful to use diagrams to illustrate the processes and procedures
2011 is the National Year of Communication
‘Hello’ is a national campaign run by The Communication Trust, complementing the Government’s commitment to support children with speech, language and communication needs.
Please visit www.hello.org.uk for more information on how you and your setting can help improve the communication skills of children and young people – so that they can live their life to the full.
Hello