Transitioning from words to speech (1-2 years)
The growth of the inventory (3-5 years)
Mastery of speech and literacy (6+ years)
Why learn about the stages?
100

What manners are typical for children at this age to produce?

Nasals, Stops, and Glides

100

T/F: the phonetic inventory is about 75% mastered by the time a child is 5 years old.

FALSE: Different research provides a variety of percentages concerning a child's phonetic inventory. 

***The phonetic inventory is almost complete by 5 years old

Table 6-8: The level of mastery for consonants ranges from 89.5%-92.4%

     for vowels ranges from 94.3%-99%

     for consonant clusters 92.4%-94.9%

(Mcleod & Baker, 2017, pg. 206)

100

What are the best predictors for a six-year-old's performance in phonological awareness and reading?

Phoneme segmentation and phoneme manipulation

What do these tasks look like?

100

How do we apply our knowledge of these stages to our clinical practice (especially when there is such variability among researchers?)

Group Discussion

200

Considering these children produce nasals, stops, and glides, what consonant clusters might they produce?

(e.g. [bw-, kw-, pw-, -nd, -nt])

(Mcleod and Baker, 2017, pg. 195)

200

Why would it be important for 5-year-olds to have a developed phonetic inventory?

In school, they will begin to dissect words that require syllable, rhyme, and phoneme awareness

They begin to develop the ability to manipulate the syllables and phonemes in words

Discussion question: What might some of these tasks look like?

200

Why must we be aware of how children's phonological awareness skills are advancing in the school-age years?

These are the skills that precede and predict their ability to read effectively and efficiently (literacy skills are developing)

learning to read -> reading to learn

200

What benefits do the awareness of these stages provide clinicians?

Group Discussion

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