Category Archives: Strategies

Back to School and to Mrs. What’s Her Name

It’s back to school time.   A child with word finding difficulties has new teachers’ names, new curricula, and new classmates’ names to retrieve.  How can we help him get through this stressful time?  Especially since stress itself is likely to contribute to additional word retrieval difficulties…

Remember that frequency of use and recency of use will impact ease of retrieval.  Simply practicing names aloud will improve word finding.  Try to associate a meaningful word with the teacher’s name.  To remember Mrs. Campbell, picture her ringing a bell at camp.  Make the syllables very precise.  Camp/bell, camp/bell, camp/bell. Associate the cue with the syllable.   Say the word aloud 5 times, then make up a meaningful sentence using the word.

Ms. Vygotsky?  got/skis.  Picture the teacher on skis.

Mr. Neiman?  the man has knees.

The more ridiculous the better.  Use your imagination!  Be sure your student repeats the target word aloud, NOT the cues.  The cues that he or she creates himself will probably be more meaningful than the ones you create.  And don’t forget to review frequently.  Make it fun!

 

So much to talk about!

Sweet 16, Elite 8, Final 4.  But wait!  There is spring break to talk about.  And what about the craziness going on in Washington?Health care, tax reform, Supreme Court hearings… There are also new curriculum words to practice.  Bottom line, there are many topics on the minds of our language therapy clients.  It is important to individualize and anticipate the vocabulary each will need to retrieve.  This is a great time to create a homework assignment!  Ask each of your speech kids to come up with 3 words they may need to retrieve quickly in the week ahead.  What better way to promote awareness and self-advocacy than to have them think of their own cues.

Encourage them to come up with their own mnemonic cues (hint: here is the process – https://www.wordfindingforkids.com/an-endorsement-from-the-word-finding-guru/).

I also wrote a dialog for kids to practice some of the words they will need for a spring break journey into Chicago. https://www.wordfindingforkids.com/spring-break-word-finding-dialog/.   Maybe it will spark some ideas to come up with a dialog of your own!  If so, please share!  I would love to publish some of your own mnemonic cues and therapy ideas.

Dr. Diane German writes a guest post – “Ask Yourself, Are You Doing Enough for Your Learners with Word Finding Difficulties?

I am delighted to welcome Dr. Diane German, author of the Test of Word Finding – Third Edition (TWF-3) and the Word Finding Intervention Program – Second Edition (WFIP -2) . Both are available from PRO.ED (see below).  Dr. German has also been my mentor in the area of word finding.   

 Ask Yourself, Are You Doing Enough For Your Learners With Word Finding Difficulties (WFD)?

Often I hear Speech and Language Pathologists (SLPs) tell me that they are concerned that they are not doing enough to facilitate the students in their schools and centers who display WFD. They ask me how and where can they improve services for these students. Because SLPs are the main advocates for students with WFD, I am happy to address this question in hopes that it will be helpful to SLPs and will improve services for students with WFD. Below, I address 3 programing areas where professionals may not be doing enough for students with WFD: WF Identification, WF assessment, and WF intervention.

It is not enough to just report that a learner has a WFD. Simply stating that a learner has a WFD may be insufficiently detailed to plan WF intervention. Research has indicated that students manifest WFD not only when retrieving single words or names, but in discourse contexts also; and that their WFD can be suggestive of three distinct error patterns. For example, it has been reported that students with WFD may manifest difficulty in retrieving the semantic aspects of the target word (Error Pattern 1, Lemma Related Semantic errors, eel for octopus, commonly know as a “slip of the tongue”,); the form properties of the word (Error Pattern 2, Form Related Blocked Error, …IDK or I Pass, commonly known as a “tip of the tongue error”); or the complete phonological schema of the target word, (Error Pattern 3, Form and Segment Related Phonologic Error noculars for binoculars, commonly known as a “twist of the tongue”).   If so, just concluding a learner has a WFD may overlook important distinctions between error patterns that could provide useful information as to the source of a child’s WFD, and likely the best approaches for his/her WF intervention.

It is not enough to assess WFD with picture naming only. WF assessment needs to be more than just naming pictures, if meaningful, strategic, WF intervention is going to be planned. Rather a deep assessment in WF needs to occur if a students WF error patterns are gong to be identified and addressed. The goal of WF assessment is the differential diagnosis of WF error patterns.

The Test of Word Finding, Third Edition (TWF-3) (German, 2015, full disclosure I am the author of the TWF-3) is a standardized measure designed to complete the needed differential diagnosis of WF in single word naming contexts. The TWF-3 goes beyond picture naming providing six informal diagnostic procedures to determine learners’ individual WF error patterns. These procedures and corresponding Error Patterns include:

(1) Contrasts between word knowledge (comprehension) and word production (lexical access) on the same words to identify performance discrepancies between knowing and retrieving a word (needed to diagnosis WFD).

(2) Phonemic cueing procedures to assess blocked pathways between semantic and phonological representations (identifies Error Pattern 2, commonly known as a “tip of the tongue”);

(3) Imitation procedure to rule out articulation difficulties (identifies Error Pattern 3, commonly known as a twist of the tongue);

(4) Response analysis to observe if access to semantic and/or form features are derailed or blocked during the WF process (Semantic substitutions can identify Error Pattern 1; no responses identify Error Pattern 2; and phonemic substitutions identify Error Pattern 3);

(5) Response time analysis to observe WF efficiency (fast/inaccurate profile identifies Error Pattern 1; slow/inaccurate profile identifies Error Pattern 2 or 3; slow/ accurate profile identifies Error Pattern 2).

(6) Secondary characteristics tally (gestures or extra verbalizations during the WF disruption) to determine the learner’s metacognitive knowledge of the WF process, (“I know it, but can’t think of it.”) and metalinguistic awareness (“It starts with the P sound.”) of the evasive target word (identifies Error Pattern 2).

In summary, an in-depth WF assessment is needed to carry out a differential diagnosis in WF so as to maximize the efficacy of intervention. Together data from all these informal assessments enables examiners to predict the nature of learners’ WF disruptions. Use of vocabulary tests that simply assess picture-naming accuracy are not comprehensive enough to identify the three WF error patterns.

 

It is not enough to teach only word meanings to learners with WFD. Although current models of vocabulary instruction result in most learners being able to access known words, their focus on learning semantic representations of words is not enough for learners with WFD. This is because students with WFD are not successful in bridging their newly learned vocabulary and their lexical access skills. They thus have difficulty retrieving learned words in school assessments, classroom discourse, and in conversations (German, 2005).

Learners with WFD need a differentiated approach to vocabulary instruction. After learning word meanings (Montgomery, 2007), these students need retrieval strategies to anchor target words for automatic usage. For these words, instruction needs to focus on elaboration of words’ retrieval strength, thereby increasing the ease with which these known words can be accessed. The Word Finding Intervention Program, Second Edition (WFIP-2) (German, 2005, For full disclosure I am the author of the WFIP-2) provides retrieval strategies for words students know. For students who demonstrate Error Pattern 1 (commonly known as a “slip of the tongue” meta cognitive strategies are recommended to reduce semantic-based WF disruptions. These include Strategic Pausing, Self Monitoring (Hanson, 1996), and Self Correction (Paul, 2001) designed to reduce fast inaccurate responses. Strategic pausing helps the learner slow down the speaking process by inserting a pause before the noun in the noun phrase and/ or before the verb or adverb in the verb phrase. When strategically placed, the pause provides the speaker time to inhibit competing names or words and select the target. Self-Monitoring and Self-Correcting are taught with strategic pausing to reduce misspeaking and aid self-corrections

A three-pronged strategic approach is recommended to stabilize retrieval of words whose form learners cannot access consistently (Error Pattern 2, commonly known as the “tip of the tongue”) or retrieve partially (Error Pattern 3, commonly known as the “twist of the tongue”). This approach strives to make evasive words salient in the learner’s lexicon, anchoring retrieval of these words for future usage. It begins with the metalinguistic reinforcement of target vocabulary, e.g., segmentation to reinforce awareness of the word’s syllabic structure experiment (ex per i ment). This metalinguistic strategy is used in tandem with the second strategy, the phonological mnemonic strategy.

Mnemonic retrieval strategies target lexical access between semantic and form based processes. Learners associate phonological mnemonics to their evasive targets to anchor their retrieval for future usage. This involves linking words (e.g., X and spear for experiment) or phrases (cumulate junk for cumulus) similar in sound form to the target word or word parts. The third strategy is rehearsal. Learners are taught to think of their phonological mnemonic cue (X and Spear), while rehearing aloud their target alone (experiment) and in a sentence (We did an experiment in science.) until they are automatic in its usage.

In conclusion, the phonological mnemonic protocol makes the word’s form more salient by providing (1) metalinguistic reinforcement of the word’s syllabic structure; (2) a phonological prompt as a mnemonic link to the word form; and (3) rehearsal. It differs from other intervention protocols as its focus is on anchoring word forms to facilitate future retrieval rather than retrieval on demand, the purpose of cueing with the first sound of the target word.  

So this New Year, ask yourself are you doing enough for your students with WFD? If not, empower yourself to do more on behalf of these students. You are the only one who has the needed background in child language to do so.

References

German, D. (2014). Test of Word Finding, Third Edition (TWF-3). PRO.ED. Austin, TX.

German, D. J. (2005). Word Finding Intervention Program, Second Edition (WFIP-2). PRO.ED. Austin, TX.

Hanson, M. (1996). Self-management through self-monitoring. In Jones, K. & Charlton, T. (Eds.), Overcoming learning and behaviour difficulties: Partnership with pupils, Routledge, London, pp 173-191.

Montgomery, J. K. (2007). Evidence based strategies for vocabulary instruction/intervention, In Denti, L. & Guerin, G. (Eds.), Effective practice for adolescents with reading and literacy challenges, Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, New York, NY, pp. 25-43.

Paul, R. (2001). Language Disorders form Infancy through Adolescence, Second Edition. Mosby, Philadelphia, PA.

Thank you, Dr. German!  Boldface emphases are my own.  

 

Word Finding Cues for Thanksgiving

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The Pilgrims and the Indians sat down for a Thanksgiving feast featuring turkey, dressing, mashed potatoes, and pumpkin pie.  It may not be historically correct, but that is an elementary student’s perspective.  I like to go over the Thanksgiving story with my students and feature vocabulary words:  Mayflower, Plymouth Rock, feast, harvest, Squanto, Massasoit, drumstick, dressing, gravy, relatives, etc.  There are any number of helpful YouTube videos, depending on the age of the kids with whom you are working.

My favorite cue is for cornucopia –  corn/coke.

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You may want to use pill/Grinch for Pilgrim. Give him a big pill!

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I like to present a menu template that the kids fill in with expected foods.  They can write words or draw pictures.  Practice aloud the phrases they may be using at the dinner table, “May I please have more turkey?” or “I would like some gravy, please.” It’s all about anticipating the words they will need.  The menu also presents an opportunity for new vocabulary:  beverage, entree, dessert.

Best wishes to all for a blessed Thanksgiving!

 

 

 

New uses for old materials

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One of my standby language activities is to play “memory” or “concentration,” where the players flip over cards and try to find pairs.  I have used the game for articulation, vocabulary, categorization, syntax, and word finding. No matter what the goal, I ask the child to make up a sentence using the word when he or she uncovers a pair.   I recently discovered a new use for this activity.  When the child finds a pair, I ask him or her to name the category in which the object is contained, and then name one or two “important characteristics.”  For the older kids, I use the term “salient characteristics.”  

What are “salient characteristics”?  Salient characteristics are the most important or defining characteristics of an object.  I start by using the example of a chair.  Does it matter what color it is?  NO. Does it matter what material it is made from? NO.  What is the important thing about a chair?  It is a piece of furniture on which one person sits.  So what is a salient characteristic of a spoon? It is an eating utensil which consists of a bowl and a handle.  What are salient characteristics of a duck?  If I say it’s a bird that quacks, there is no doubt what animal I am describing.

When a word finder is stuck on an “evasive word,” he can let his listener know the word for which he is searching by naming its category and salient characteristics.  Obviously, this doesn’t work for all words.  However, it is one more tool for him to have in his toolbox.

You can totally control the vocabulary and the level of difficulty with this game.  When I get energetic, I even use curricular words.  It’s a fun way to work on word finding skills for all ages.

 

Thinking Routines for Word Finding

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Those of you who read this blog regularly will recognize that I feel it’s very important for kids to be aware of why they are working on their word finding, and how it can help them communicate in school, at home, and with their friends.  Learning metalinguistic strategies helps them apply their improved word finding skills to a variety of contexts.  In that vein, I want to pass on an interesting article about how “thinking routines” help kids (and adults) learn to think more deeply and with real understanding.

At a Learning and the Brain conference, Ron Ritchhart, senior research associate at Project Zero at Harvard University (http://www.pz.harvard.edu/who-we-are/people/ron-ritchhart), stated, “When we have a rich meta-strategic base for our thinking, that helps us to be more independent learners.” Project Zero teaches a thinking routine they call “See, Think, Wonder”.  The idea is to use a simple, easy to remember metalinguistic process that learners can apply to all their learning. The thinking routine becomes a habit that promotes deeper learning across the board.

Here’s the link    http://ww2.kqed.org/mindshift/2016/03/31/when-kids-have-structure-for-thinking-better-learning-emerges/

http://ww2.kqed.org/mindshift/2016/03/31/when-kids-have-structure-for-thinking-better-learning-emerges/

Let’s apply this to word retrieval.  When kids internalize a process of “anchoring” their words in their memory, they develop a habit of consciously supporting the retrieval of a word in the future.  Their metalinguistic skills send the message, “I am deliberately thinking about this word and I will be able to ‘find’ it in my brain at a later time.”

Teach a word finding “thinking routine.”  Practice the word ALOUD, reinforce each syllable, and use a “word finding 5” (A word finding 5:   Say the word aloud 5 times, create an original meaningful sentence, and get a ‘high 5’).  Here is the link to the entire process: https://www.wordfindingforkids.com/an-endorsement-from-the-word-finding-guru/

SEE, THINK, WONDER, RETRIEVE!

 

Christmas and Hanukkah vocabulary

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Christmas is rushing toward us with the speed of a locomotive.  Here are some quick WF cues for holiday words you need NOW:

ornament:  or/mint or on/a/mint

holiday – hall/day  (picture of school halls decorated)

wreath – ring (visual of wreath, round like a ring)

mistletoe –  missile/toe or miss/the/kiss (present concept of kissing under the mistletoe; younger kids want to ‘miss the kiss.’)

pine tree –   pie (triangular piece of pie superimposed upon pine tree)

Hanukkah is almost over, but use “on/a/cup” for Hanukkah and “many candles”  on the menorah.

Please share your ideas for holiday cues!

If you are not familiar with Diane German’s Word Finding Intervention Program protocol for using the cues, please go to this link: https://www.wordfindingforkids.com/an-endorsement-from-the-word-finding-guru/

 

 

 

 

Differential Diagnosis in Word Finding – part 2

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Word finding therapy should focus on the types of errors your client exhibits.  This is another in my series of 3 posts after listening to Dr. Diane German’s presentation at the Illinois Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ISHA) Convention on Saturday, Feb 14, “Picture Naming is Not Enough to Identify Semantic and Phonological Word-Finding Errors.”

Yep…Valentine’s Day in an ISHA seminar- how romantic.

You can read my post about Type 1 errors here: https://www.wordfindingforkids.com/differential-diagnosis-in-word-finding/   Dr. German calls Type 1 errors “slip of the tongue.”

Type 2 Errors are “tip of the tongue” errors.  These are the s-l-o-w retrievers.  These word finders experience a lot of delays and time fillers “…uh, um, it’s a…..uh, you know….”.   They may say things like “It starts with a t” or “Wait a minute, I know it”. They may not provide an answer at all.  They may use gestures that tell you they know the word for which they are searching (e.g., pounding to indicate “hammer”)  or secondary characteristics of frustration such as hitting their fist on their thigh, snapping their fingers,  or looking up to the ceiling.  These “tip of the tongue” errors are perhaps the most common word finding errors.

Children who experience Type 2 errors are more likely to err on less common words.  The words may be longer in length than Type 1 errors and may come from less dense phonological neighborhoods.  In other words, there aren’t a lot of words that sound similar to them.  In oral reading, their errors reflect the same patterns:  lower frequency words with less common phonological patterns.    Errors on irregular past tense verbs can be a red flag for Type 2 errors.  Another potential difficulty is labeling a category.

In conversational speech, these are the students who fail to provide pronoun referents.  They come home from school and tell their parents, “She took us there today.”  Who is “she”?   And where is “there?”.  They talk about “guys” and “thingies” and “stuff.” “Doohickies” and “whatchamacallits” are among their favorite terms.

Phonemic cues are highly effective for Type 2 word finders.  They often retrieve the word when their listener provides the beginning consonant+vowel  or first syllable of the word for which they are searching.  Dr. German explains that this “jump starts” the search process in the brain.

So how can we help a child learn to cue himself when he experiences these Type 2 errors?  Try to help him anticipate the vocabulary words he will need and provide phonemic cues for the more difficult words (described here:  https://www.wordfindingforkids.com/an-endorsement-from-the-word-finding-guru/   )  .  Errors of this type suggest that a child needs a stronger connection between the word’s meaning and its phonological representation.  So repeat, repeat, repeat!

But what about words he has not anticipated?  Some students help themselves by silently going through the alphabet and thinking of beginning sounds (NOT letters, but sounds).  Help him learn to use specific words so his listener can understand his intent.  If he makes a lot of gestures, help him realize that those gestures help provide a path to the word he needs. Practice automatic associations, categories, and common word associations.  Encourage him to repeat the word aloud once he “finds” it.

Please remember that retrieval is affected by frequency of use and recency of use.  Help a child plan ahead:  what words will he need?  Practice those words aloud!

Please go to Dr. German’s website http://wordfinding.com/ for more info.

 

Last Chance for Valentine’s Day Word Retrieval Cues!

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Last chance to review word finding cues for Valentine’s Day!

cupid    – “cute/stupid”   This little guy is cute but stupid.  I have found some parents teach their kids that “stupid” is a naughty

word, so be careful with this one.

florist –  “flowers on the floor”

valentine –  the kids don’t need a cue for this word, but I like to teach them “tiny tines” on a fork because so many of them say

“valentime”.

exchange – a big X on a pile of change.  I like to use real coins and have the kids draw a big paper X to cover them.

Hopefully, you reinforced Valentine’s Day vocabulary a couple of weeks ago.  Remember to present the cues BEFORE your students need them!

Helping preschoolers with word finding difficulties

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Preschoolers with word retrieval difficulties are tricky.  We need to be sure theirs is not a deficit in vocabulary or a phonological disorder that makes them difficult to understand.  Sometimes I have worked with preschoolers in language therapy for a while before I realized their underlying difficulty was actually word finding.

Please read my posts of October 14, 20 and 21, 2014, about identifying word retrieval problems.  Some preschoolers do not respond well to formal testing, and it’s very important to look at their use of language in a natural environment.  One of the most helpful strategies for preschoolers is to offer a choice of 3 or 4 responses and ask them to choose the correct one:  “Are you telling me about your elbow, your shoulder, or your ankle?” or “Would you like the purple, the orange, or the yellow marker?”

Remember that a failure to respond does not necessarily mean the child does not know the answer.  Give him extra time, and provide advance warning if possible.   “I’ll ask you to tell me what your favorite project was yesterday.  You can share about making a snowman, drawing a caterpillar, or sharing a snack.  Be thinking about what you’d like to tell your friends.”

Encourage gestures and actions.

“Can you tell me another way?”

Establish a signal or a key phrase for the child to let you know he needs some more “thinking time.”

For some children, providing the beginning sound (not beginning letter) is helpful.  This is generally more helpful with older children, but some preschoolers are aided by this prompt.  I suspect it is related to their phonological development, but I truly don’t know.

Any activities you are currently using for language development are helpful for kids with word finding problems.  Develop vocabulary, categories, and associations among different words.  Expand their “safety net” of a rich language base. Most important, have fun!  A happy, engaged child is ready to learn.