Anonymous wrote:DD has no real words at 18 months. Maybe there is an occasional “that” but really only “that”. She also barely babbles, but does point to what she wants but is also getting very frustrated these days because she can’t communicate with words. Otherwise she is social, smiley, climbing all over the place etc. I have an appt for a speech evaluation but I’m feeling anxious about yet future. Any others whose kids were slow to talk but they eventually got it? Obviously I’m aware this is a read flag for ASD, apraxia etc. [/quote
My dd didn't start talking until after age 3. She graduated from speech therapy at age 5, fully verbal. We had been in early intervention since 12 months, when the ped referred us because she wasn't babbling (in dd's case, she was dx with asd at age 4.5, but like I said she is fully verbal now-I am NOT saying your dc has asd, most kids with language delays do NOT).
It's good that you are getting the evaluation. It's good too if they check her hearing (professionally, not banging a pot wtf). Early intervention can do so much! You are doing the right thing.
Anonymous wrote:My eldest didn’t say his first word until 19 months. We were referred to early intervention at his 15 month appointment and started speech therapy at about 18 months.
By 24 months, he was completely caught up and talking in full and complex sentences. We placed out of early intervention after six months (basically, that’s as fast as possible as they only test every six months).
He’s now a smart, vivacious, neurotypical five year old thriving in kindergarten.
Anonymous wrote:DD has no real words at 18 months. Maybe there is an occasional “that” but really only “that”. She also barely babbles, but does point to what she wants but is also getting very frustrated these days because she can’t communicate with words. Otherwise she is social, smiley, climbing all over the place etc. I have an appt for a speech evaluation but I’m feeling anxious about yet future. Any others whose kids were slow to talk but they eventually got it? Obviously I’m aware this is a read flag for ASD, apraxia etc.
Anonymous wrote:Have you banged a pot next to her head?
Anonymous wrote:While you wait for the speech therapy consult, I'd start using Sign Language with her - she'll pick it up quickly so at least she can say important words. YOU CAN learn these signs - they aren't hard, and if you use them as you voice, she will notice and use them back.
Here is one video of ASL signs for babies: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YjYbopUNQEw
milk - juice - water (3 different signs)
eat
hungry
thirsty
more
all done
please
thank you
ball - and some of her other favorite toys she asks for
go outside
take a walk (outside) vs play in backyard
play
your turn
Mom
Dad
cat
dog
happy
sad
angry/mad
need help
stop