A&P Chapter 6 and 8 – Flashcards

Unlock all answers in this set

Unlock answers
question
Appraisal + Diagnosis=
answer
Assessment
question
Types of Appraisals
answer
Informal and Formal
question
Screening
answer
quickly identifies whether or not a person may have a communication disorder; activities or tests that identify individuals who merit further evaluation
question
Informal Appraisal
answer
speech sample, read a passage; Swimming, Grandfather, Rainbow passage
question
Formal Appraisal
answer
Fluharty Preschool Speech and Language Screening Test (2nd Edition), Diagnostics Evaluation of Articulation and Phonology (DEAP), Joliet 3-minute Speech and Language Screen (Revised)
question
Appraisal
answer
collection of data
question
Diagnosis
answer
represents the end result of studying and interpreting these data
question
Assessment
answer
clinical evaluation of the client's disorder, can be divided into appraisal and diagnosis
question
Phonetic/Phonemic Inventory
answer
all sounds child can produce and all sound they can use contrastively that conveys meaning
question
Phonetic/Phonemic Inventory
answer
hearing test, speech sound test (words and conversational speech), stimulability measures, related areas: language, phonological awareness, speech sound perception/discrimination, special considerations (co-morbid; co-existing diagnosis, Down syndrome), oral mech exam
question
Advantages of Artic Tests
answer
standardized scores, inventory of errors in different word positions, standardized administration, detailed scoring procedures (child to child, clinician to clinician)
question
Disadvantages of Artic Tests
answer
may not provide a representative sample (Goldman-Fristoe only looks at consonants in the initial, middle, and final position), may not provide a reliable sample, some tests are designed to just assess speech sounds, not phonological processes, may not assess all sounds in all contexts
question
When selecting the assessment measure, look at the
answer
age of child, suspected problem, adequate sample of speech sounds, need for standardized scores (qualifying for services), type of sound error analysis, specificity/sensitivity (how well does the test do what is is supposed to do)
question
False/Positive
answer
child has disorder when they really do not
question
False/Negative
answer
identifying child is typical when they really have disorder
question
When using speech sound disorder tests, you should...
answer
if there is an error, transcribe the entire word (minimally broad; narrow if necessary), record a continuous speech sample, elicit additional examples of error sounds (additional sounds in different positions; conversational speech)
question
Speech Sound Assessments at NCCU
answer
GFTA 2, Khan-Lewis Phonological Analysis 2, Clinical Assessment of Articulation and Phonology (CAAP), Bankson-Bernthal Test of Phonology, Slosson Articulation Language Test with Phonology, Kaufman Speech Praxis Test for Children, Photo Articulation Test (PAT-3)
question
Arizona Articulation Proficiency Scale-III
answer
good for older clients, pictures are more mature (black and white), sentence test capability (sound production in sentences), severity rating description, vowels and consonants are scored
question
Diagnostic Evaluation of Articulation and Phonology (DEAP) includes:
answer
screening, diagnostic, oral mech exam, articulation measure, phonological disorders measure, good sensitivity and specificity
question
Hodson Assessment of Phonological Patterns-III
answer
preschoolers, elicits and requires transcription of 55 utterances using toys instead of pictures (more of a spontaneous speech sample with showing pictures), both a comprehensive evaluation and screening test, The Phonological Evaluation can be administered in 20 minutes and contains objects and pictures to elicit 50 stimulus words
question
Describing Error Patterns
answer
two-way scoring, five-way scoring, five-way + phonetic transcription of errors
question
Two-way scoring
answer
screenings or during therapy (incorrect/correct)
question
Five-way scoring
answer
omission or deletion, substitution, distortion, addition, correct
question
Stimulability testing
answer
examine ability to produce a misarticulated sound in an appropriate manner, not a formal procedure, "Watch, listen, say what I say", move from isolation to CV to CVC to word level for each sound in error (coarticulation affects that helps child produce sound or hinders child's ability to produce sound), at least two or three trials each, possibly in each position
question
How do we use stimulability information?
answer
sounds that are highly stimulable should be targeted for intervention or sounds that are highly stimulable should NOT be targeted for intervention (if a child is stimulable for a sound, then that should is already in the child's phonetic/phonemic inventory, priority may be sounds that are not in the child's inventory)
question
Language
answer
80% of children with SSD have poor language skills
question
Language
answer
screen at minimum, children with significant speech sound errors may need a comprehensive language assessment, monitor language development -reassess speech as language improves (ex. 3-4 yr old, non-verbal, 1-2 words, 3-4 word sentences; the more they tried to talk, the more speech sound errors they tried to produce; if you have more verbal production, then you have more of what the child can produce)
question
Triangle levels
answer
bottom-metalinguistics, middle-metaphonology, top-phonological awareness
question
Metalinguistics
answer
ability to use language as a tool, ability to manipulate language, see language as a big picture (looking at a word and seeing that it is made of smaller parts)
question
Phonological Awareness
answer
ability to reflect on and manipulate the structure of an utterance; rhyme knowledge, blending (sounds together), segmentation (sounds apart), manipulation of syllables, clusters and phonemes (What is the first sound in the word sit?), children with speech sound disorders perform poorer on these tasks
question
Speech Perception/Discrimination
answer
Does a child have the ability to discriminate sounds to produce them?, research results are inconclusive or indicate the answer no, speech sound discrimination conducted for children who are collapsing at least two phonemes into a single sound (child substitutes -/s/ for /z, sh, 3, tS/
question
Highly unintelligible children
answer
when eliciting a conversational sample, select the topic and provide a structure, give child specific topic (you know what the child may talk about), gloss the child's utterance (repeat what they said; important if you are recording)
question
Young children/children with emerging phonological systems
answer
consider overall development of child, supplement measures with information from caregivers (target words, language at home, objects that child has attempted to label at home, if there is any intent), conduct an independent analysis (look at child's production on it's own, do not compare child to norms)
question
Independent analysis
answer
only analyzes the child's speech production; does not compare child to adult model; does not matter if sound is produced incorrectly in relation to an adult target, some have a rule that sound must appear twice
question
Relational analysis
answer
compare child's production to adult model, traditional but may not be appropriate for this population
question
Bernthal et al (2009)
answer
suggests an expressive vocabulary of at least 50 words (if they are having difficulty saying words, they will not be able to do the Goldman-Fristoe)
question
Independent analysis
answer
inventory of speech sounds; consonants and vowels, word positions, articulatory features, inventory of syllables and word shapes (syllable constraints-are there any syllable shapes they cannot produce); CVC words --> CV
question
Goldman-Fristoe Test of Articulation
answer
Relational Assessment Measure; comparing child's speech productions
question
Inventory of speech sounds
answer
list of speech sounds that client can produce correctly
question
After collecting data across multiple context,
answer
next step is to analyze and interpret the information
question
At the end of your appraisal,
answer
you should have the following (collected in multiple contexts); list of where correct and error productions occur, syllable shapes, initial, medial, and final, prevocalic, intervocalic and postvocalic consonants
question
prevocalic
answer
consonant before the vowel
question
intervocalic
answer
between two vowels, before and after
question
postvocalic
answer
consonants occurring after the vowel
question
You may not get every consonant in EVERY position!
answer
..
question
hat
answer
/h/ initial, pre /t/ final, post
question
shoe
answer
/sh/ initial, pre
question
yellow
answer
/j/ initial, pre /l/ medial, intervocalic
question
pajamas
answer
/p/ initial, pre /d3/ medial, intervocalic /m/ medial, intervocalic /z/ final, post
question
Remember..
answer
when giving a test, loot at test manual and see how they define a consonant in a middle position; if there are more than two syllables, then looking for the medial consonant is unreliable
question
At the end of your appraisal you should have,
answer
distribution of speech sounds, inventory of speech sounds (phonetic and phonemic)
question
Phonetic Inventory
answer
list of speech sounds that client can produce correctly (accuracy may vary according to context)
question
Phonemic Inventory
answer
all the sounds the child can produce contrastively to differentiate meaning (use in different contexts, use different sounds with different words)
question
Phonemic Inventory
answer
analyze errors to determine what sounds are being substituted, deleted, etc., does the child always say /w/ for /r/ or others sounds too? does child substitute /w/ for /l, sh, r/? - substitution patterns
question
Phonemic Inventory
answer
can use minimal pairs to see if child can use sounds contrastively; /wEd/ -/rEd/ (target) child produced /wEd/ for both productions, /wEd/ - /lEd/ (target) child produced /wEd/ for both productions, /rEd/ - /lEd/ (target) child produced /wEd/ and /lEd/ - Child does not know the differene between /w/ and /r/ or /l/; knows that there is a difference between the /r/ and /l/. he is trying to use it contrastively and differentiate sounds
question
Does the child know the difference between producing a /w/ for /r/?
answer
He does not contrastively know the difference between these two sounds but realize that there is a difference between /r/ and /l/. It is possible to produce a sound incorrectly in 9/10 contexts but still get one right; you need to see more of a pattern (2 to 3 times in a sample)
question
Articulation disorder
answer
there are phonemic contrasts - differentiate between sounds, problems are motor-based, speech sound errors are consistent (same error across positions)
question
Phonological disorder
answer
review inventory and distribution of speech sounds, examine syllable shapes and constraints, examine phonological error patterns (15 patterns); place, manner, voicing or phonological analysis (Kahn-Lewis assessment)
question
Phonological Error Pattern Analysis
answer
phonological process analysis is the most common type of phonological error pattern analysis, describe the type and frequency of the phonological processes, child could use a phonological process but not have a disorder (depends on age of child); ex. 20 month old deleting final consonants (expected for 2 yr old, but would not address in therapy), can use standardized test measures (Kahn-Lewis)
question
Phonological processes
answer
standardized test may define a phonological process differently from another; need to use definition presented in test manual, may invalidate the norms if you do not follow directions in manual, idiosyncratic processes-unusual or individually distinct, processes for vowels too
question
idiosyncratic processes
answer
things that no one has see before; unique to that child
question
Need for Intervention
answer
Is there a speech sound disorder?, What is the nature of the problem?, How does it impact communication, intelligibility or severity? (school-system)
question
Intelligibility
answer
perceptual judgment (not exact science), takes into account the number, type, and consistency of errors; vowel or consonant errors
question
Three common measures of intelligibility
answer
open-set, closed-set, rating scale
question
Open-set
answer
transcribe a speech sample and determine the percentage of words identifiable; use stars and checks for positive marks
question
Closed-set
answer
client repeats words or reads from a word list or passage; determine the percentage of words identifiable; Rainbow passage
question
Rating scale
answer
Level 6-Sound errors are occasionally noticed in continuous speech Level 5-Speech is intelligible, although noticeably in error Level 4-Speech is intelligible with careful listening Level 3-Speech intelligibility is difficult Level 2-Speech is usually unintelligible Level 1-Speech is unintelligible
question
Percentage of Intelligibility
answer
number of words understood/number of words understood + number of unintelligible words x 100 ex. 50/150 x 100 = 33%
question
Typical intelligibility
answer
3 yr old - 75% intelligible 4 yr old - 85% intelligible 5 yr old - 95% intelligible
question
Severity
answer
conveys the significance of the impairment, percentage of consonants correct (PCC is one of the most commonly used measures (only consonants correct)
question
PCC
answer
mild - 85-100% mild-moderate - 65-85% moderate-severe - 50-65%
Get an explanation on any task
Get unstuck with the help of our AI assistant in seconds
New