Anonymous wrote:OP here...I am curious, once diagnosed with speech development delay, how would a speech therapist work with DS to address the issue?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This may seem totally out of left field, could your husband have aspergers? It sounds like you are accessing all the right services for your child and if there's anything there to discover, hopefully they will. But most adults today didn't have that support when they were children. "They thought I had development delays but then I turned out really intelligent" hits a chord..
Not diagnostic, but something to think about: http://aspergersquiz.com/
Seriously? Love the retrograde armchair diagnosis on your part!
Anonymous wrote:This may seem totally out of left field, could your husband have aspergers? It sounds like you are accessing all the right services for your child and if there's anything there to discover, hopefully they will. But most adults today didn't have that support when they were children. "They thought I had development delays but then I turned out really intelligent" hits a chord..
Not diagnostic, but something to think about: http://aspergersquiz.com/
Anonymous wrote:Isn't it also a fallacy that bilingual kids are later talkers? I think they tend to be later in proficiency in either one of their home languages, but they're not expected to have zero words at appropriate ages to have words just because they're bilingual. I want to say that is a common misconception.
Anonymous wrote:OP here...I am curious, once diagnosed with speech development delay, how would a speech therapist work with DS to address the issue?
Anonymous wrote:OP here...he is interactive sometimes (e.g. he will pick up a book want want you to read it to him), but he won't follow directions at all. I suspect he hears fine because if he hears his favorite cartoon, he will run towards the sound.
Anonymous wrote:Don't call EI, call a private SLP. I was you two years ago. Bilingual child who wasn't talking much at two. At three, ChildFind said she was fine. At four, she was diagnosed with speech apraxia. What we saw at two was early evidence of her disorder. A private speech pathologist will help you better understand what's happening. We see Amanda at Childrens Speech and Language Services in Falls Church.
Anonymous wrote:Call EI. The ignoring part sounds more worrisome than not talking.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I can't understand his jargon at all and he won't point at anything he wants as a way of communicating. He will usually reach out and grab what he wants and would cry if he can't get it. I just called EI to schedule an appointment. DH is still opposed but says he will go along with it. He says when he was little his teachers said he had developmental delays but it turned out he was just super intelligent and they didn't understand him.