Child Language Disorders
Dysphagia
Aural Rehab
Aphasia & Hearing
Sounds & Hearing
100

Children whose speech and/or language skills are unlike children at any age who are developing normall

What is a speech/language disorder?

100

This process is also known as deglutition; it involves the movement of substances from the mouth to the stomach.

What is swallowing?

100

Alleviating and minimizing the perceived difficulties related to hearing loss, with specific attention to communication needs, behavioraland psychosocial adjustment, and interpersonal, educational, and vocational functioning 

What is Aural Rehabilitation?

100

What are the three major parameters of measuring a sound? 

What is Intensity, Frequency, and Duration?

100

A child produces "Tie" for "Try" and "Bu" for "Blue"

What is cluster reduction? 

200

Significant subaverage general intellectual functioning and significant limitations in self-cares and social/interpersonal skills may indicate this. 

What is an Intellectual Disability?

200

Difficulty swallowing; may take more time and effort to move food or liquid from the mouth to the stomach.

What is Dysphagia?

200

Individuals with profound hearing loss who communicate with manual language and have build a culture and identity around their mode of communication. 

What is Big D Deaf?

200

The type of aphasia where Broca's area is impacted and speech is short and grammatical.

What is non-fluent aphasia?

200

A machine that can be small and portable that produces pure tones at various frequencies and intensities.

What is an audiometer?
300

Class of words do children generally learn first

What are nouns?

300

Dysphagia is a _____ not a diagnosis!

What is a symptom?

300

 A term used in the medical community for individuals with profound hearing loss. 

What is small D Deaf?

300
The type of aphasia where speech is fluent but nonsensical and Wernicke's area is impacted.

What is fluent aphasia?

300

A record and/or chart of patient’s ear-specific auditory thresholds for pure tones

What is an audiogram?

400
Knowing less than 50 words by age 2 may indicate this. 

What is a language delay?

400

A procedure where a flexible camera is inserted through the nose to visually assess the throat and larynx during swallowing, helping identify swallowing difficulties.

What is FEES (Fiberoptic Endoscopic Evaluation of Swallowing)

400
Professional that evaluates and provides education, counseling and training for receptive and expressive communication skills; evaluates and manages amplification devices

What is an Audiologist?

400

Changes in the outer and/or middle ear that results in the sound not conducted adequately to the inner ear

What is Conductive hearing elevation (loss)?

400

The softest sound a person can hear

What is a hearing thershold? 

500

Children with speech and/or language skills that are typical for children who are younger

what is a speech/language delay?

500
When materials pass through the vocal folds.

What is aspiration? 

500

Professional that evaluates receptive and expressive language skills; provides assessment and intervention services to individuals with a range of communication disorders across the lifespan.

What is an SLP?

500

Changes in the inner ear and/or neural pathways that results in the sound not conducted adequately to the brain

What is sensorineural hearing elevation (loss)? 

500

A child produces "Ca" for "Cat" and "Boo" for "Book"

What is final consonant deletion