Praxis Chapter 5 Articulation-Phonological Development and Disorders Quiz – Flashcards

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6. You are working as a clinician in a private clinic. A father brings his son Johnny, age 4 ½ years old, for an evaluation. According to his father, Johnny is "hard to understand and sometimes the kids at school make fun of him." The pediatrician has told Johnny's father that Johnny will "outgrow this speech problem on his own," but the father wants to make sure that this advice is correct. Johnny will be starting kindergarten in 6 months, when he turns 5 years of age, and his father wants to be sure that Johnny speaks as intelligibly as possible so that he will not be teased in elementary school. When you evaluate Johnny, you find that he has θ/s, t/f, d/ð, and j/l substitutions. You decide to place him into therapy. You would begin therapy by addressing the:
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B. t/f substiution B. The /f/ sound is developed earlier than the /s/, /r/, /θ/, and /l/ sounds. Thus, beginning therapy by addressing /f/ would be the best approach.
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7. In Oller's stages of infant phonological development, reduplicated babbling precedes: A. nonreduplicated or variegated babbling. B. expansion C. cooing D. phonation E. reduplicated expansion
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A. In Oller's stages of infant phonological development, reduplicated babbling precedes Nonreduplicated or variegated babbling.
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8. A clinician evaluates the speech of a 5-year-old child with a phonological delay. The child is not intelligible to her kindergarten teacher or her peers, and is placed into therapy to improve her intelligibility. Assuming that this child uses the phonological process of consonant-cluster reduction, which of the following is the word you would most likely put on a word list used for treatment? A. bus B. stopped C. blouse D. Lassie E. shoes
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B. Stopped is the only word in the list that contains a consonant cluster
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9. The therapy technique of phonetic placement is used to teach or establish: A. auditory discrimination B. stimulability C. production of a phoneme in isolation D. minimal pair contrasts. E. phonological processes
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C. Phonetic placement is used when a client cannot imitate the modeled production of a phoneme such as /s/ or /r/. The clinician uses a combination of verbal instructions and physical guidance to show the client how target sounds are produced.
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10. A speech-language pathologist's role in tongue thrust or oral myofunctional therapy may include: A. none; SLPs do not work with those students B. working as a team member with a dentist, orthodontist, and physician C. evaluating and treating the effects of OMD on swallowing, rest postures, and speech D. A only E. B, C
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E. ASHA has stated that this therapy is appropriate for and within the purview of speech-language pathologists, who assess and treat the effects of OMD on swallowing, rest postures, and speech. Speech-language pathologists traditionally work on a team also composed of a dentist, orthodontist, and physician.
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11. A child comes to you for an evaluation. According to her mother, Sharma has a history of middle ear infections. Sharma's mother reports that Sharma is quite difficult to understand. For example, according to her mother, Sharma says things like gk/dk and ko/to. This child is manifesting the phonological process of: A. fronting B. stridency deletion C. backing D. glottal replacement E. progressive assimilation
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C. A child who says things like gʌk/dʌk and koʊ/toʊ is manifesting the phonological process of backing.
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12. The articulation therapy approach that emphasizes the syllable as the basic unit of speech production and heavily utilizes the concept of phonetic environment is: A. McDonald's sensory-motor approach B. the maximal contrast approach C. the metaphon approach D. Van Riper's traditional approach E. McCabeand Bradley's multiple phoneme approach
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A. The articulation therapy approach that emphasizes the syllable as the basic unit of speech production and heavily utilizes the concept of phonetic environment is McDonald's sensory-motor approach.
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13. A child is referred to you by his preschool teacher. This child, Damien, is 4 years 3 months old and has transferred from out of state. In his previous state, Damien was reportedly assessed by a speech-language pathologist who recommended that Damien receive intervention before kindergarten. According to the report from the previous clinician, Damien uses the phonological processes of gliding, consonant duster reduction, stopping, reduplication, and final-consonant deletion. Your assessment confirms the presence of these phonological processes. You would begin treatment by addressing:
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Reduplication is the earliest of the listed phonological processes to be phased out. In typically developing children, reduplication is usually phased out by approximately 2 years 4 months of age.
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14. Which one of the following is FALSE regarding dental deviations? A. Skeletal malocclusion refers to deviations in the shape and dimensions of the mandible and maxilla B. Dental malocclusion refers to deviations in the positioning of individual teeth. C. In class I malocclusion, the arches themselves are generally aligned properly; however, some individual teeth are misaligned. D. In class II malocclusion, the maxilla is receded and the mandible is protruded. E. Overjet occurs when a child has a Class II malocclusion and the upper teeth from the molars forward are positioned excessively anterior to the lower teeth.
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D. The maxilla is receded and the mandible protruded in class III malocclusion. In class II malocclusion, the maxilla is protruded and the mandible receded.
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15. Which one of the following is FALSE regarding treatment of child with SSDs? A. The distinctive features approach is used to find a child's underlying patterns (e.g., problems with the feature of nasality) and train one or several sounds in that pattern in hopes that generalization to other sounds in that pattern will occur. B. Hodson and Paden's cycles approach involves treating children with phonological disorders in cycles in which the child is trained to a criterion of mastery for error patterns such as final-consonant deletion and fronting. C. Van Riper's approach focuses on phonetic placement, auditory discrimination/perceptual training, and drill-like repetition and practice at increasingly complex motor levels until target phonemes are produced correctly in spontaneous conversation. D. In minimal pair contrast therapy, the clinician uses pairs of words that differ by only one feature; of the paired words, one is the target word in which the sound is produced correctly and the other is the child's incorrect production. E. Children whose SSDs are phonological in nature and accompanied by difficulties in language are at the greatest risk for failing achieve phonological awareness and eventual literacy skills; thus, it is important to incorporate phonological awareness treatment into therapy sessions with them.
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B. In Hodson and Paden's cycles approach, children are not trained to a criterion of mastery for error patterns. Rather, the clinician introduces correct patterns, gives the child limited practice with production of those patterns, and moves on to other error patterns
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A 5-year-old child, Crystal S., is brought to you for an evaluation of her speech. The family speaks only English in the home. According to Crystal's mother, Crystal "loves to talk but most people have trouble understanding her." As you play with Crystal informally you estimate that she is approximately 50-60% intelligible. You conduct an oral peripheral evaluation, which reveals that Crystal does not have any anatomical or physiological anomalies that would explain why she is so unintelligible. You also conduct in-depth assessment in other areas to determine the nature of Crystal's unintelligibility and to determine therapy goals. 16. You discover through your assessment that there are some sounds that Crystal consistently misarticulates. For example, she usually makes a t/k substitution (e.g., tea/key). You want to know if Crystal can produce /k/ in isolation. You show her how to produce /k/ by giving her a model, and you tell her, "Watch me make the /k/ sound". Then you do it just like I did." When you are doing this, you are assessing Crystal's: A. phonological knowledge B. receptive phonology skills C. overall intelligibility D. stimulability E. diadochokinetic skills`
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D. You are assessing Crystal's stimulability for the /k/ sound by evaluating whether or not she can imitate your model.
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A 5-year-old child, Crystal S., is brought to you for an evaluation of her speech. The family speaks only English in the home. According to Crystal's mother, Crystal "loves to talk but most people have trouble understanding her." As you play with Crystal informally you estimate that she is approximately 50-60% intelligible. You conduct an oral peripheral evaluation, which reveals that Crystal does not have any anatomical or physiological anomalies that would explain why she is so unintelligible. You also conduct in-depth assessment in other areas to determine the nature of Crystal's unintelligibility and to determine therapy goals. 17. You find that Crystal uses a number of phonological processes. One of those processes is stopping. You know this when you hear Crystal make such substitutions as: A. bae/bath B. tu/shoe C. ruz/rush D. nake/snake E. tuhree/three
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B. If Crystal says tu/shoe, she is demonstrating the phonological process of stopping.
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A 5-year-old child, Crystal S., is brought to you for an evaluation of her speech. The family speaks only English in the home. According to Crystal's mother, Crystal "loves to talk but most people have trouble understanding her." As you play with Crystal informally you estimate that she is approximately 50-60% intelligible. You conduct an oral peripheral evaluation, which reveals that Crystal does not have any anatomical or physiological anomalies that would explain why she is so unintelligible. You also conduct in-depth assessment in other areas to determine the nature of Crystal's unintelligibility and to determine therapy goals. 18. You decide that for therapy, you would like to use the distinctive features approach to help Crystal become more intelligible. In this approach, you would: A. use minimal pairs. B. try to find Crystal's underlying patterns and train one or several sounds in those patterns in hopes that generalization to other sounds in that pattern would occur C. use auditory bombardment as a key component of each therapy session D. A, B E. B, C
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D. If you use the distinctive feature approach, you would use minimal pairs and also try to find Crystal's underlying patterns and train one or several sounds in those patterns in hopes that generalization to other sounds in that pattern would occur.
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19. You are approached by Dr. Kim Lee, a 34-year-old university assistant professor from Korea. Dr. Lee has been in the United States for six years; she received her Ph.D. in chemistry in the United States. Dr. Lee now teaches undergraduate and graduate classes in chemistry at a local university. Dr. Lee reports that she usually gets good student evaluations; however, many students report that they have trouble understanding her speech. Dr. Lee states that "I feel frustrated because I know my accent is getting in the way of my teaching." Dr. Lee has no history of dyspraxia , voice problems, or other communication disorders in Korean or English. The best thing for you to do in this case is to: A. give Dr. Lee standardized language and articulation tests in English because it is clear that Dr. Lee has a communication disorder that needs to be remediated, and these tests will spotlight Dr. Lee's weaknesses. B. tell Dr. Lee that her accent makes her special, and that no accent training is necessary because Dr. Lee's accent is "a unique and beautiful part of who you are." C. tell Dr. Lee that you will assess her English intelligibility using an accent assessment instrument as well as analysis of a conversational sample; if she would like to participate in elective accent training to become more intelligible, such training is available to her. D. Tell Dr. Lee to listen daily to more English TV and radio, and come back in 6 months if her student evaluations have not improved E. Tell Dr. Lee that she has a communication disorder in both Korean and English, and that she will need intensive therapy to remediate this disorder
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C. Tell Dr. Lee that you will assess her English intelligibility using an accent assessment instrument as well as analysis of a conversational sample; if she would like to participate in elective accent training to become more intelligible, such training is available to her. It is highly unlikely that Dr. Lee has a communication disorder.
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20. A 3-year-old child is receiving therapy for remediation of several phonological processes. The child has difficulty acquiring the rules of the phonological system, and the clinician decides to help the child pay attention to the phonological structure of language as well as help the child develop awareness that sounds can be classified and characteristics such as place (front-back), duration (long-short), and others. To achieve this goal, the clinician will most likely use: A. Hodson's cycles approach B. McDonald's approach C. metaphon therapy D. the distinctive feature approach E. Van Riper's traditional approach to therapy
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C. Metaphon therapy is designed to enhance children's metaphonological skills. The metaphon therapy approach is often used with preschool children who have moderate to severe phonological disorders. Metaphon therapy focuses on feature differences between sounds to help children develop an awareness that sounds can be classified by characteristics such as place (front-back), duration (long-short), and others.
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Compare and contrast linear and non linear phonology theories
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Linear phonology is characterized by rules that operate in a domain of linear strings of segments. Linear phonological theories assume that phonological properties are linear strings of segments and that sound segments are composed of a bundle of independent characteristics or features Nonlinear phonology was developed to account for the effects of stress and other prosodic variables. Nonlinear theories assume that there is some sort of hierarchy that helps organize both segmental and suprasegemental phonological units or properties
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After 3 years of age, which phonological processes should children not be using?
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reduplication, weak/unstressed syllable deletion, consonant assimilation, prevocalic voicing, fronting of velars, final-consonant deletion, diminutization
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What are the differences between dysarthria and developmental apraxia of speech in children? What are the ramifications of these differences in assessment/treatment?
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Dysarthria: speech-motor disorder caused by peripheral or central nervous system damage. Damage causes paralysis, weakness, or incoordination of the msucles of speech. Usually associated with monotonous pitch, deviant voice quality, variable speech rate, and hypernasality. "slurred" speech Treatment is very repetitive and structured. Increasing muscle tone and strength, increasing range & rate of motion, and treating other parameters (respiration). Intensive and systematic drill, modeling, phonetic placement, and emphasis on accuracy of sound production. Apraxia of speech is caused by central nervous system damage. No weakness or paralysis of the muscles. However, the CNS damage makes it difficult to program the precise movements necessary for smoothly articulated speech. Thus its a motor programming disorder. Treatment is multimodal, involving extensive drills, stressing the sequence of movements involved in speech production, imitation, decreased rate of speech, normal prosody, and increased accuracy in the production of individual consonants, vowels, and consonant clusters.
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Specific components of an assessment
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case history, orofacial examination, hearing screening, 1) conversational speech samples 2) evoked speech samples 3)stimulablity assessment 4) standardized tests
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describe 1 assessment and 1 training concept or principle that clinicians should keep in mind when providing services to adults who refer themselves for accent training to increase their intelligibility
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culturally sensitive and compatible with the client's interests. treatment should involve visual cues, tactile cues, and auditory cues. Many people benefit from the Visipitch. Assessment: include production of consonants and vowels, vocal volume and quality, fluency, and others. Most EFL adults have communication differences, not disorders
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