Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why is he playing video games at 5yo? I continue to believe that excessive screen time is the root for many childhood social problems these days.
And yes, I know I’m on a screen now, but I didn’t get them too much when I was a kid! (And I’m young, 33).
Don't listen to this person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be very careful with DCUM diagnosis. Some of that can be very normal with a 5 year old boy especially from people whose kids don't have language disorders or have kids with multiple needs. I would get a speech evaluation to check it out. The not being detailed about school can be very normal at that age but some of the other things you mentioned I would get checked out.
Nobody can diagnose anything over the internet.
Op,
What you’re describing sounds like a fluency issue when he was younger:
https://www.asha.org/Practice-Portal/Clinical-Topics/Childhood-Fluency-Disorders/
If he received these services though early intervention, they don’t actually diagnose your kid. They give services when there is a significant delay but services don’t automatically transfer when a child aged out.
It’s good that he can be understood by others. He may be an introvert or he might not be able to get all his thoughts out, so sticks with the minimum. Does he have this pattern at home too? Personally if he had speech issues while young, I would err on the side of caution and have him evaluated.
Not sure if you’re local, but the best speech evaluation I got was from the lab school of Washington. (The worst from UMD.). You could probably get more recs from the SN forum.
Anonymous wrote:Why is he playing video games at 5yo? I continue to believe that excessive screen time is the root for many childhood social problems these days.
And yes, I know I’m on a screen now, but I didn’t get them too much when I was a kid! (And I’m young, 33).
Anonymous wrote:Why is he playing video games at 5yo? I continue to believe that excessive screen time is the root for many childhood social problems these days.
And yes, I know I’m on a screen now, but I didn’t get them too much when I was a kid! (And I’m young, 33).
Anonymous wrote:Why is he playing video games at 5yo? I continue to believe that excessive screen time is the root for many childhood social problems these days.
And yes, I know I’m on a screen now, but I didn’t get them too much when I was a kid! (And I’m young, 33).
Anonymous wrote:I would be very careful with DCUM diagnosis. Some of that can be very normal with a 5 year old boy especially from people whose kids don't have language disorders or have kids with multiple needs. I would get a speech evaluation to check it out. The not being detailed about school can be very normal at that age but some of the other things you mentioned I would get checked out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, not exactly what you're describing, but my friend has a daughter who has selective mutism. She can talk, but mostly does not in any social environments. I think you should stop comparing your son to other kids, he's 5. It's not uncommon for kids that age to be shy or afraid to speak in front of others, and doesn't mean there's something else going on.
I am currently going through this right now with my 4 year old. Smart and talkative with me, his Dad and my Mom and 1 or 2 others but clams up in school and even with familiar family and friends. He often gives just a few words to a question when I know he can give much more. However, shyness and social anxiety runs in my family so I am confident in the selective mutism diagnosis.
I am not sure you will get much out of a speech evaluation especially if the first one didn't have testing scores that were below average I think you need a more detailed look at what is going on from maybe a neuropsychologist (including a classroom observation).
Anonymous wrote:Well, not exactly what you're describing, but my friend has a daughter who has selective mutism. She can talk, but mostly does not in any social environments. I think you should stop comparing your son to other kids, he's 5. It's not uncommon for kids that age to be shy or afraid to speak in front of others, and doesn't mean there's something else going on.