Toddlers to get lessons in
talking as TV kills conversation
Daily Mail | May 10, 2007
By LAURA CLARK
Toddlers will be
taught how to talk in an attempt to arrest the shocking decline in
children's communication skills.
A recent study revealed that half of them are unable to string a
sentence together at age five.
As a result, ministers are encouraging the use of the special "early
talk" programme, targeted at infants from their earliest months to
age five, which uses signing, gestures and symbols to expand
vocabulary.
Research from the children's charity I CAN revealed last year that
half of youngsters - rising to 84 per cent in some areas - begin
formal education with "impoverished speech and language".
They are unable to utter a whole sentence and can understand only
simple instructions.
Further research by the charity found that parents spend more time
watching TV and cleaning around the house than talking to their
children.
The charity has developed the teaching kits for staff in nurseries
to help counter the problem and encourage babies and toddlers to
"talk" to each other and adults.
It will also be used to target children with learning difficulties.
Children's Minister Beverley Hughes endorsed the scheme and said it
will be used in 200 Government-backed Sure Start children's centres,
benefiting 160,000 toddlers.
The charity is already working with local councils to extend the
scheme to voluntary and private nurseries, potentially capturing
tens of thousands more infants.
As well providing training and classroom materials for staff, the
programme includes an advice service for parents, who will be given
tips on how to interact with their children.
The charity's spokesman, Clare Geldard, said: "We know from nursery
teachers and reception class teachers that children are coming in
with fewer speech and language skills, for example they only use
short sentences and their vocabulary is not as enriched.
"The environment and society in which we live at the moment is less
supportive of developing children's language."
She said she knew of one speech therapist who found that none of the
three-year-olds she was assessing could say more than one word at a
time.
Mrs Geldard went on: "The parents think, 'Oh it will be all right
when they get to school - the school will bring them up to the right
level'. But if a child is not talking before they go to school, they
won't be able to springboard into academic learning.
"Half of them will become frustrated at not being able to understand
instructions and express themselves. They will be labelled naughty
children.
"The remainder, the ones I really worry about, will withdraw and
nobody will notice they have a problem until much later."
THE AGES AT WHICH SPEAKING MILESTONES SHOULD BE REACHED
0-1 years Recognise parents' voices, make basic sounds and copy
facial expressions
1-2 years Understand basic words and use hand gestures
2-3 years Put basic sentences together
3-4 years Ask lots of questions and socialise with friends
4-5 years Speak confidently in conversations with occasional
mistakes
TIPS FOR PARENTS...
• Take turns to talk. Speak to your child and give them plenty of
time to respond.
• Encourage talking - ask open-ended questions, not simple yes or no
questions.
• Try talking about what's going on in their world.
• Speak in sentences one word longer than theirs to help build up
their vocabulary.
• Read to your child to develop good listening skills.
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