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100

What’s a IFSP?

An intervention plan that addresses both child (birth to 2 yrs old) and family needs that affect the child’s development and includes the child’s and family’s status, the recommended services and expected outcomes

100

Define Communication Impairment 

A significant disability in young children characterized by difficulty receiving, sending, processing and comprehending concepts of verbal and nonverbal communication 

100

Functional Communication…what is it?

The use of symbols or actions to express basic wants and needs and to obtain a desired outcome (helps a child accomplish a goal)

100

What does Functional Use mean?

Means a child uses an object or toy in the way it’s meant to be used, in a way that makes sense in daily life

100

What is Scaffolding?

The use of both verbal and nonverbal prompts to frame of behavior

200

Explain what’s a multidisciplinary team, an interdisciplinary team and a trans disciplinary team

multidisciplinary- professionals from different disciplines work independently. Minimal collaboration 

Interdisciplinary- professionals from different disciplines work together, share info, etc.

Trans disciplinary - professionals share roles. Maximum collaboration 

200

Describe a child who is described as “established risk” vs a child who is “at risk”

Established Risk- have a diagnosed medical condition or disability that is known to cause disability delays (such as ___)

At Risk - children who are more likely to experience developmental delays due to various environmental, biological or social factors (such as ___)


200

What is IPP?

Interprofessional Practice: when professionals from multiple disciplines work together in a coordinated way to deliver care and service. Goals to improve outcomes for children and families by combining expertise, reducing service duplication and addressing needs holistically 

200

What is a transdisciplinary assessment and what are the benefits?

A team approach were professionals from different disciplines, share roles and skills. It provides a comprehensive understanding, leads to increase efficiency and better informed planning. Leads to improved outcomes for children.

200

What does Communication Breakdown mean?

Happens when a child’s attempt to communicate is not understood by the listener, or when the child can express what they want to say

300

What is the difference between Disability, Impairment and Handicap?

Disability - inability or lack of ability to perform tasks, functions or skills

Impairment- abnormality in function/structure

Handicap- social consequences of disability/impairment that prevent an individual from their potential 

300

Define LLE

Stands for Late Language Emergence 

A hallmark characteristic of children with LI and often the first diagnostic symptom of a larger language problem.

300

What does Generalization mean and why is it important?

Generalization: ability for the child/person to use the responses they learned in different settings.

It’s important because if the skill is only shown in therapy, then the skill is not part of their functional communication skills. Is the real life impact of speech therapy 

300

Difference between Evaluation, Screening and Assessment 

Evaluation- formal diagnosis and eligibility 

Screening - quick check for risk

Assessment- continuous testing process to guide services

300

How are questionnaire and parent interviews used in assessments?

Questionnaires are used to collect information such as a child’s birth, medical and developmental histories and current behaviors. Enhances of a validity of assessments because parents know so much about their child and have large samples. Interviews can focus on the child’s interest abilities and caregivers priorities

400

Who’s involved in an IFSP?

Family, multidisciplinary team, other professionals

400

What’s APGAR?

A newborn or neonatal screening tool used to rapidly assess overall health 

400

Describe the transactional model of EI

A model of typical communication and language development where both the child and parent contribute 

400

What is a play-based assessment?

Observing how a child communicates and interacts during play to assess development in a natural, comfortable way (ideal for infants and toddlers)

400

Where are the components of preplanning assessment?

Family interview/caregiver interview, questionnaires and checklist, review reviewing family, concerns, priorities, and resources, setting goals for assessment, coordinating the team

500

what is the PL-99457?

Piece of legislation mandated that states establish comprehensive services for children with developmental disabilities and their families. First mandated in 1986

500

How many words does a child with LLE have at 25 months? 

Less than 50 words

500

Difference between Responsive Interaction Strategies, Directive Interaction strategies and Blended strategies 

Responsive Interaction- intervention by responding to what the child does without forcing a response

Directive interaction- ally’s alter cues and prompts systematically to create the behavior 

Blended - designed to feel more like real-life interactions. Focused on modeling language and responding to a child’s communication during everyday routines 

500

What’s Nonsymbolic, Prelinguistic, Symbolic, Linguistic, and Intentional Communication 

Nonsymbolic- child communicates without conventional symbols, like words, signs or picture symbols 

Prelinguistic- intentional communication, but real words are not used yet

Symbolic- child starts to use symbols to represent ideas

Linguistic - true language use

Intentional- gesture or sound that’s meant to send a message

500

What are important things to note when describing communication?

Notes how the child communicates, what they communicate about, when/where, and look for joy, attention, imitation, and functional use

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