
Specific Language Impairment has been actively studied for more than 40 years. Language acquisition is the primary area of concern as the child grows and develops. There are no obvious related causes such as hearing loss or low IQ. The condition appears in young children and is known to persist into adulthood. Although the causes are unknown, current research focuses on possible inherited tendencies. Early identification and intervention are considered best practices, in order to minimize possible academic risks.
1. Specific Language Impairment has many names and it is
surprisingly common.
SLI is just one of the many communication disorders that affect
more than 1 million students in the public schools. If your
child has been evaluated by a speech pathologist, you may have
heard its other names: developmental language disorder, language
delay or developmental dysphasia. Specific language impairment
is the precise name that opens the door to research about how to
help a child grow and learn.
SLI is more common than you might think. Research over the past
ten years has generated accurate estimates of the numbers of
young children that are affected by SLI. We now know it could be
as high as 7 to 8 percent of the children in kindergarten. In
comparison, Down syndrome or autism affects less than one
percent of the five-year olds.
2. Late talking may be a sign of disability.
As they enter their two's and grow into three and four, children
have a remarkable number of ways to tell adults what they need.
Even if the words don't all sound right, a normally developing
child will make many efforts to communicate and will make his
point effectively. Young children ask so many questions -- often
exhausting their parents and care providers. Children who don't
ask questions or tell adults what they want may have a
communication disorder.
Children with SLI may not produce any words until they are
nearly two years old. At age three, they may talk, but can't be
understood. As they grow, they will struggle to learn new words,
make conversation and sound coherent.
Today, research is underway to determine which children do not
outgrow this pattern of delayed speech. By age 4 to 5 years, SLI
could be a signpost of a lasting disability that persists
throughout the school years.
3. A child with SLI does not have a low IQ or poor hearing.
Several other disabilities involve difficulties
communicating, but for these children the primary diagnosis will
be mental retardation, or autism, or hearing loss, or cerebral
palsy. A child with SLI scores within the normal range for
nonverbal intelligence. Hearing loss is not present. Emerging
motor skills, social-emotional development and the child's
neurological profile are all normal. The only setback is with
language. SLI is the primary diagnosis.
4. Speech impediments are different from language
disorders.
A child with a speech disorder makes errors in pronouncing
words, or may stutter. Recent studies find that most children
with SLI do not have a speech disorder. SLI is a language
disorder. This means that the child has difficulty understanding
and using words in sentences. Both receptive and expressive
skills are typically affected.
5. An incomplete understanding of verbs is an indicator of
SLI.
Five-year old children with SLI sound about two years younger
than they are. Listen to the way a child uses verbs. Typical
errors include dropping the -s off present tense verbs and
asking questions without the usual "be" or "do" verbs. For
example, instead of saying "She rides the horse" the child will
say "She ride the horse." Instead of saying "Does he like me?"
the child will ask "He like me?" Children with SLI also have
trouble communicating that an action is complete because they
drop the past tense ending from verbs. They say, "She walk to my
house yesterday" instead of "she walked to my house."
6. Reading and learning will be affected by SLI.
SLI does affect a child's academic success, especially if
left untreated. Forty to seventy-five percent of the children
have problems learning to read.
7. SLI can be diagnosed precisely and accurately.
In the last ten years, researchers have documented the ways
that SLI occurs. Clinical practice is catching up to these
advances in research. In the past, SLI has not been included on
educational classification systems used by speech pathologists
or psychologists, and when identified, it was called a language
delay.
In 2001, the Psychological Corporation released the first
comprehensive test for SLI. The Rice/Wexler Test of Early
Grammatical Impairment is based on research funded by the
National Institutes of Health, and carried out at the University
of Kansas and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Speech
pathologists and preschool educators can use this test with
children ages 3 to 8. It will point to the specific gaps in a
child's language abilities so that treatment can be more
effective. It is especially useful for identifying children with
SLI at the time of school entry.
8. The condition may be genetic.
The genetic origin of SLI has not yet been proven, but
studies show that fifty to seventy percent of children with SLI
have at least one other family member with the disorder. Several
researchers are studying twins, looking for the genetic link. In
2001, British researchers successfully found the chromosome that
affected 15 of 37 members of a London family with a profound
speech and language impairment.
9. The nature of the disability limits a child's exposure
to language.
Children with SLI need extra opportunities to talk and to
listen, but because of the disability, they may actually have
fewer chances. At a young age, curious children ask questions
over and over as they see, touch, and experience the world. The
adults in their life respond, giving them vocabulary and grammar
in a spontaneous teaching format. A child with SLI has trouble
asking "Do you?" and says instead "You like ice cream?" This
kind of question is easily misunderstood. A child who cannot get
the message across may simply stop trying. Interactions are
especially difficult with other children because they are less
supportive and patient than adults.
10. Early intervention can begin during preschool.
By age five, parents can secure a conclusive diagnosis, but
being proactive in the preschool years is often time well spent.
Equipping a child for success at ages three and four will lead
to positive experiences in kindergarten -- and the signs of SLI
are present by age three.
Some preschool programs are designed to enrich the language
development of students with disabilities. This classroom may
include normally-developing children who will act unknowingly as
models. The focus of class activities may be role-playing,
sharing time, or hands-on lessons with new, interesting
vocabulary. This kind of preschool will encourage interaction
between children, and will build rich layers of language
experience. It may even include techniques from speech pathology
that solicit from children the kinds of practice they need to
build their language skills.
Parents can also send their preschool child to a speech or
language pathologist in private practice. This professional can
assess the child's needs, engage in structured activities, and
can send home materials for enrichment.
This fact sheet was written by Joy Simpson in collaboration with
Mabel L. Rice, an international expert on language disabilities
in children. Dr. Rice is the Fred and Virginia Merrill
Distinguished Professor of Advanced Studies at the University of
Kansas.
References
Leonard, L.B. (1998). Children with specific language
impairment. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
National Information Center for Children and Youth with
Disabilities, fact sheet number 11 (FS11), January 2004.http://www.nichcy.org
Rice, M. L. (2002). A unified model of specific and general
language delay: Grammatical tense as a clinical marker of
unexpected variation. In Y. Levy and J. Schaeffer (Editors),
Language competence across populations: Toward a definition of
Specific Language Impairment, (pp. 63-95). Mahwah, New Jersey:
Lawrence Erlbaum.
Rice, M. (2000). Grammatical symptoms of specific language
impairment. In D.V.M. Bishop and L.B. Leonard (Editors) Speech
and language impairments in children: causes, characteristics,
intervention and outcome (pp. 17-34). East Susex, England:
Psychology Press.
Rice, M. and Wilcox, K. (Editors) (1995) Building a
language-focused curriculum for the preschool classroom: a
foundation for life-long communication. Baltimore: Brookes
Publishing Company.
Schuele, C.M. and Hadley, P. (1999). Potential advantages of
introducing specific language impairment to families. American
Journal of Speech-Language-Pathology, 8, 11-22.
Tager-Flusberg, H. and Cooper, J. (1999). Present and future
possibilities for defining a phenotype for specific language
impairment. Journal of Speech, Language, and Hearing Research,
42, 1275-1278.