Anonymous wrote: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.
Very much agree. Children's and KKI are such great, local resources too.
In our case, a developmental pediatrician was helpful to find that it wasn't a receptive delay, it was ADHD in our 4 year old.
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:Adding to above: We saw many SLPs and other evaluators, but they were not very knowledgeable. They shrugged or suggested "apraxia." It wasn't until we saw the Camaratas that they nailed down my son's issues. Their testing showed a child with a typical nonverbal IQ and social communication but bottom percentile receptive skills that were dragging him down across the board.
How did you treat it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Adding to above: We saw many SLPs and other evaluators, but they were not very knowledgeable. They shrugged or suggested "apraxia." It wasn't until we saw the Camaratas that they nailed down my son's issues. Their testing showed a child with a typical nonverbal IQ and social communication but bottom percentile receptive skills that were dragging him down across the board.
When did you see them? If it was years ago, they were the best. They've gotten so busy and taken on other things that they generally aren't the best anymore. Most people I know who have gone the past few years have not been happy.
+1. Their heyday was several years ago. He rarely sees patients and she's just an SLP. The reports people get back are really slipshod.
Anonymous wrote:Adding to above: We saw many SLPs and other evaluators, but they were not very knowledgeable. They shrugged or suggested "apraxia." It wasn't until we saw the Camaratas that they nailed down my son's issues. Their testing showed a child with a typical nonverbal IQ and social communication but bottom percentile receptive skills that were dragging him down across the board.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Adding to above: We saw many SLPs and other evaluators, but they were not very knowledgeable. They shrugged or suggested "apraxia." It wasn't until we saw the Camaratas that they nailed down my son's issues. Their testing showed a child with a typical nonverbal IQ and social communication but bottom percentile receptive skills that were dragging him down across the board.
When did you see them? If it was years ago, they were the best. They've gotten so busy and taken on other things that they generally aren't the best anymore. Most people I know who have gone the past few years have not been happy.
Anonymous wrote:Adding to above: We saw many SLPs and other evaluators, but they were not very knowledgeable. They shrugged or suggested "apraxia." It wasn't until we saw the Camaratas that they nailed down my son's issues. Their testing showed a child with a typical nonverbal IQ and social communication but bottom percentile receptive skills that were dragging him down across the board.