- Normal speech, language & communication development
- The importance & development of play
- Vital components: attention, listening, information-carrying words,vocabulary, sentence structure, social interaction etc.
- What happens when things go wrong?
- Ways to encourage speech, language & communication development
- Basic functional signing
- Group running
- Introduction to programmes
- Working with parents
- Legal necessities
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- Marketing & advertising
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Wednesday, 1 December 2010
Smart Talkers Training for franchisees
I've just finished writing the distance learning course for Smart Talkers Pre-School groups. This means that franchisees can train at their own pace. It will be easier to come to Centrix House for a week but there are some who would prefer not to spend a week away from loved ones. It is actually for the international franchisees who start very soon. The training comprises:
Tuesday, 30 November 2010
Kindergarten Program Boosts Students' Vocabulary in 1st Grade
by Sarah Sparkes
A new randomized control trial in Mississippi has found that a good kindergarten literacy program can boost disadvantaged students' vocabulary in kindergarten by as much as an extra month of school.
A new randomized control trial in Mississippi has found that a good kindergarten literacy program can boost disadvantaged students' vocabulary in kindergarten by as much as an extra month of school.
Early childhood programs like Mississippi's have focused heavily on early vocabulary for decades, with growing urgency since a seminal 1995 University of Kansas study showed children of parents on welfare enter school knowing about 525 words, less than half of the 1,100-word vocabulary of children of parents in professional jobs.
The Regional Educational Laboratory Southeast, housed at the SERVE Center of the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, evaluated the Kindergarten PAVEd for Success program, which trains teachers to supplement their normal literacy instruction. Pam Finney, the research management leader for the study, said the program was purposely "not a very complicated intervention," and it helps teachers engage in the same complex conversations that the Kansas study showed professional parents have with their children, "introducing 50 cent words as opposed to 25 cent words," as Ms. Finney put it.
Each teacher gets a list of thematically related and complex words; for example, "temperature," "exhaust," "steam," and "boil," or "pineapple," "banana," and "kiwi." The teacher reads stories that incorporate the words with the students and opens conversations with the students.
"One of the strategies is building bridges, having conversations with students whatever they want to talk about," Ms. Finney explained. "The teacher learns how to have these conversations. Take 'apple,' 'banana' and 'Kiwi.' Students in the Delta may never have heard of a kiwi or seen the fruit. So the teacher shows them and they talk about it."
Researchers tracked nearly 1,300 kindergarteners at 30 Mississippi Delta school districts, in which 128 kindergarten classes were randomly assigned to either use the program or teach literacy as they normally would. Teachers in the program received training but were allowed flexibility to implement it. All of the schools had to have at least 40 percent of their students in poverty, and both groups of children were similar demographically.
The researchers found children who participated in K-PAVE had an expressed vocabulary one month ahead in vocabulary development and academic knowledge at the end of kindergarten compared with students in the control group, as measured by a normed test. The students showed no significant difference in listening comprehension skills.
"These students who were below the norm for vocabulary to start, they're one month closer to the norm, one month closer to those middle-class kids," said Ludy van Broekhuizen; the executive director for SERVE Center and the REL's director. "To actually get an impact on an intervention that required such a small effort on the part of the district is sort of remarkable in some ways."
Teachers trained in the program were significantly more likely than the control-group teachers to include activities focused on students' vocabulary and comprehension development, but they did not show significantly more instructional or emotional support for students.
The researchers have just submitted a follow-up study on the children's literacy skills by the end of 1st grade, but they wouldn't share those details yet. Because the students in the K-PAVE study improved in vocabulary, but not in comprehension, compared to their peers, I'd be interested to see what a follow-up study on these kids would show. Considering kindergarteners and 1st graders are just learning to read, would a one-month edge be enough to boost these students reading development, get them moved to more advanced groups, and so on? It would be interesting to find out. Moreover, since the original "vocabulary gap" study focused on parents' conversations, not teachers', I'd be interested in whether similar training could help parents improve their conversations with their children, too.
Sarah spent the last five years writing about federal and state education regulations. Now covering education research, she can most often be found with a double-shot mocha in one hand and the latest academic journal in the other. Join her in a discussion of the politics, personalities, and p-values in education studies, and help bring research out of the lab and into the classroom.
First published on Education Week blog 29th November 2010
Related articles
- Vocabulary for 1st Grade (brighthub.com)
Friday, 26 November 2010
The number one skill
Talking Point http://www.talkingpoint.org.uk/video.aspx is an excellent web site with lots of information and support for parents and professionals. They have a series of videos. This is the first in the series about the importance of being able to Learn to speak, listen and communicate well. Its really the most important thing that children can learn. There are great tips and information in this video.
Monday, 22 November 2010
Hello to the national year of communication
Hello aims to make communication for all children and young people a priority in homes and schools across the UK so that they can live life to the full. The campaign is backed by the Department for Education and supported by BT.
A child with a speech, language and communication need may struggle to get words out of their mouth or not understand words that are being used. They may have difficulties holding a conversation, have multiple difficulties or simply have a limited vocabulary. These barriers are often invisible to others, meaning their needs are often misrepresented, misdiagnosed or missed altogether.
Please visit www.hello.org.uk for information on how you can help improve the communication skills of children and young people and to sign up for regular updates. You can also follow the campaign on Twitter : http://twitter.com/Comm_nTrust] and facebook: http://on.fb.me/9yHIIZ].
Smart Talkers are supporting the Hello campaign!
Wednesday, 17 November 2010
S & L World: up-date
We've been working hard on the first edition of the on-line, global Bulletin. I've had the easier task of co-ordinating the articles, while Ray has had all the technical stuff to do for the layout and for the web-site.
It will be quarterly with subscription payable via PayPal. It won't matter when you start the subscription as the programme always counts a year from the start date. To contribute to the magazine will require subscription after the first edition.
So far, its been a tremendously enjoyable job. I've been liaising with so many intelligent, passionate, proactive professionals in my own field. It's renewed my enthusiasm and reminded me what a fantastic job we have.
The great news is, we have all the contributions now apart from one, which is on its way. There is a high paediatric bias in the first issue but we'll make sure that this is addressed for the second one. We've got some great articles, news features, an interview with a therapist from UAE and a couple of letters already for the launch.
There are a couple of advertising spaces free so if you know a company who would like to take advantage of the extra special offers please ask them to get in touch.
We're giving away the first issue as advertising so watch this space!
It will be quarterly with subscription payable via PayPal. It won't matter when you start the subscription as the programme always counts a year from the start date. To contribute to the magazine will require subscription after the first edition.
So far, its been a tremendously enjoyable job. I've been liaising with so many intelligent, passionate, proactive professionals in my own field. It's renewed my enthusiasm and reminded me what a fantastic job we have.
The great news is, we have all the contributions now apart from one, which is on its way. There is a high paediatric bias in the first issue but we'll make sure that this is addressed for the second one. We've got some great articles, news features, an interview with a therapist from UAE and a couple of letters already for the launch.
There are a couple of advertising spaces free so if you know a company who would like to take advantage of the extra special offers please ask them to get in touch.
We're giving away the first issue as advertising so watch this space!
Monday, 15 November 2010
Toddlers' learning 'hit by noise'
This was brought to my attention by the Royal College of Speech & Language Therapists from Yahoo news:
Young children are starting nursery school unable to speak and listen properly because of continuous noise and poor conversation at home, an Ofsted report has found.Skip related content
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Constantly switched on televisions, noisy brothers and sisters and raised voices are increasingly hampering children's language skills, it says.
The study, on how the best schools teach children to read, says some schools report spending days or weeks educating parents and improving children's social skills.
In some cases, children arrive at nursery still in nappies and with dummies in their mouths.
It says: "The majority of the schools visited that had nursery classes commented that, increasingly, children joined unprepared for learning and with poor listening and speaking skills. Read more on:
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/21/20101114/tuk-toddlers-learning-hit-by-noise-6323e80.htmlThis is exactly why we created Smart Talkers Pre-School Communication Groups. We owe it to our children to make sure they are ready for school in more ways than one!
We work on attention, listening, vocabulary, auditory memory, narrative skills, simple reasoning and so much more. Without these skills children will not be able to start to read and write. Spoken language abilities are the building blocks for written language
www.smarttalkers.org.uk
Related articles
- Children unable to speak properly when they start nursery school (telegraph.co.uk)
- Toddlers' learning 'hit by noise' (mirror.co.uk)
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