Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Language disorders can be co-morbid but not all are. OP is not identifying any other issue.
Hard for the OP to know if she hadn't seen a developmental pediatrician.
Agree. Most of the time when kids are evaluated it is not because their parents are identifying a host of concerns. It is usually something like "He doesn't talk like his brother did". Someone who can do a comprehensive evaluation, like a psychologist or developmental pediatrician, would be best. If there really are no other issues, then the testing will show that.
Also, testing can be a great way to identify strengths. My kid had a language delay but was strong at identifying letters and letter sounds. I had no idea and it was pretty much the only skill that was above average. It was the push I need to hire a literacy specialist to work with him the year I held him back from Kindergarten and kept him in a play based preschool. His speech pathologist kept coming to his school to work on language and social skills, then at home he learned to read. When he started Kindergarten having that foundation in reading was so helpful. He struggled with everything else but having that one skill gave him confidence.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Language disorders can be co-morbid but not all are. OP is not identifying any other issue.
Hard for the OP to know if she hadn't seen a developmental pediatrician.
Anonymous wrote:Language disorders can be co-morbid but not all are. OP is not identifying any other issue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
An evaluated by a developmental pediatrician would be helpful. It will give you possibly a diagnosis but more importantly a roadmap of what services/therapy to do and help provide insurance coverage for them.
Many speech therapists will do an assessment before working with your child. They'll set out goals.
An ABA therapist is helpful if your child refuses to things, has frequent meltdowns, but at a basic level help you as a parent to interact with your kid so when there are problems with communication you can learn behavioral strategies to help your child.
A developmental ped is not helpful in language disorders as they are generalists, not specialists in language. Very few can distinguish specifics. A good SLP will be more helpful. ABA is not good for language disorders due to the rigid style treatment even with a relaxed provider.
A developmental pediatrician is absolutely helpful b/c lots of issues can be related to speech delays. Look at the whole child.
Your post reminds me of ones I've seen in the past from a mom really bitter over her son's autism diagnosis. Developmental pediatricians diagnose more than that, and ABA is for helping with behavior, so time to let go your obvious prejudices, pp.
This might be the same mom.
OP, PP is correct, you want some who will look at the whole child, like a developmental pediatrician. Language disorders often have comorbidities, so you'll want someone to be looking out for those other things. Meanwhile, an SLP will be able assess and work on the language issues. It's not something where you have to choose one or the other.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
An evaluated by a developmental pediatrician would be helpful. It will give you possibly a diagnosis but more importantly a roadmap of what services/therapy to do and help provide insurance coverage for them.
Many speech therapists will do an assessment before working with your child. They'll set out goals.
An ABA therapist is helpful if your child refuses to things, has frequent meltdowns, but at a basic level help you as a parent to interact with your kid so when there are problems with communication you can learn behavioral strategies to help your child.
A developmental ped is not helpful in language disorders as they are generalists, not specialists in language. Very few can distinguish specifics. A good SLP will be more helpful. ABA is not good for language disorders due to the rigid style treatment even with a relaxed provider.
A developmental pediatrician is absolutely helpful b/c lots of issues can be related to speech delays. Look at the whole child.
Your post reminds me of ones I've seen in the past from a mom really bitter over her son's autism diagnosis. Developmental pediatricians diagnose more than that, and ABA is for helping with behavior, so time to let go your obvious prejudices, pp.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP,
An evaluated by a developmental pediatrician would be helpful. It will give you possibly a diagnosis but more importantly a roadmap of what services/therapy to do and help provide insurance coverage for them.
Many speech therapists will do an assessment before working with your child. They'll set out goals.
An ABA therapist is helpful if your child refuses to things, has frequent meltdowns, but at a basic level help you as a parent to interact with your kid so when there are problems with communication you can learn behavioral strategies to help your child.
A developmental ped is not helpful in language disorders as they are generalists, not specialists in language. Very few can distinguish specifics. A good SLP will be more helpful. ABA is not good for language disorders due to the rigid style treatment even with a relaxed provider.
Anonymous wrote:My son had this when he was younger - I was very worried. Take your child for an evaluation with Dr. Stephen Camarata in Nashville — he is an expert and everything he predicted was true. My son is in a mainstream private, Honor Roll, lots of friends. Get lots of speech therapy.
Anonymous wrote:OP,
An evaluated by a developmental pediatrician would be helpful. It will give you possibly a diagnosis but more importantly a roadmap of what services/therapy to do and help provide insurance coverage for them.
Many speech therapists will do an assessment before working with your child. They'll set out goals.
An ABA therapist is helpful if your child refuses to things, has frequent meltdowns, but at a basic level help you as a parent to interact with your kid so when there are problems with communication you can learn behavioral strategies to help your child.
Anonymous wrote:My son had this when he was younger - I was very worried. Take your child for an evaluation with Dr. Stephen Camarata in Nashville — he is an expert and everything he predicted was true. My son is in a mainstream private, Honor Roll, lots of friends. Get lots of speech therapy.