T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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176.1 | Not uncommon in 2-3 year olds | CNTROL::STOLICNY | | Tue Jun 16 1992 11:14 | 15 |
|
Sheryl -
My son, Jason went through an approx. 6 month period of stuttering
which began when he was 25 months. Note 1167 in PARENTING_V3
has some good information in it. To make a long story short, I
believe that it is both age-related and stress-induced. We tried
very hard not to draw attention to the stuttering and to resist
the urge to make him "perform" in front of friends and relatives.
His stuttering was on-again, off-again over the 6 month period and
got REALLY BAD at times (it was so sad). However, he's now 2 years,
9 months and I can't recall the last time he stuttered - which is
a good sign!
Carol
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176.2 | Where is PARENTING_V3 | TRACTR::MAZUR | | Tue Jun 16 1992 11:16 | 11 |
|
Hi Carol,
Well, that's some good news. Can you tell me how to get
to Parenting_V3? I can't find it!
Thank you,
Sheryl
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176.3 | note 9.21 has v3 pointer | CNTROL::STOLICNY | | Tue Jun 16 1992 11:36 | 4 |
|
See note 9.21. There's a pointer there.
Carol
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176.4 | pointer | TNPUBS::STEINHART | Laura | Tue Jun 16 1992 11:54 | 1 |
| Note 135 discusses speech therapy.
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176.5 | Stress-related? | CIVIC::NICKERSON | | Tue Jun 16 1992 14:01 | 16 |
| Just to ease your mind some more.....
My son (now 3) was a very early talker with no stutter. We recently
moved and there was ALOT of tension in the house. Tim started to
stutter about 2 weeks before the actual move. It was scary because he
was stuttering on EVERY word! We just tried to keep calm and patient
and would tell him to think about what he was trying to say.
We've been in the new house for a month now and Tim's stutter is
COMPLETELY gone! His speech got better within a week after the move
and was gone within three weeks.
Good luck...
Linda
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176.6 | ours did this some | CRONIC::ORTH | | Tue Jun 16 1992 14:49 | 16 |
| I think it can be both age and stress.
Joshua stuttered a lot when he was 2.5 years, and we were moving from
one state to another, and from hotel, to grandparents to one temp.
housing to another temp. housing, all withing about 4 wks.! After we
moved into our own home, and were here about 1 month, he stopped
completely (except for a brief bout when he was about 4, and decided to
try to talk like Piglet on Winnie-the Pooh!!).
Daniel just turned 3 and has begun stammering. When he goes to begin
almost any sentence, he says either the initial sound (if its a vowel),
or a a sort of "aaaaaaaaaaaaaa" sound, before he begins. Then he's off
and running, and doesn't do it again, usually, till the next
conversation. We just ignore it.
--dave--
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176.7 | | A1VAX::DISMUKE | Say you saw it in NOTES... | Tue Jun 16 1992 16:54 | 7 |
| My 5 year old son does this - has for awhile, but his pedi wasn't too
concerned - said we are doing the right thing (ignore it) and it is
lessening - slowly. We'll see what the schools say when he starts in
Sept.
-sandy
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176.8 | preschooler mispronunciation? | CUPMK::STEINHART | | Mon Feb 21 1994 08:42 | 7 |
| Is it normal for a 3-year-old to mispronounce vowels? This is what
often makes her speech hard to understand. She pronounces several
vowels the same way. She also drops Rs in the middle of words. The
result is that "party" sounds like "potty", and so forth. (We live in
New England, but neither her dad nor I drop Rs.)
L
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176.9 | crazy mixed up accents! | LEDS::TRIPP | | Mon Feb 21 1994 13:59 | 19 |
| Laura,
Just from my observation I'd say yes on both counts. Do I dare to
remember the days of going to McDonalds and having a request for
"Foofies"=french fries, and yes I do remember "loosing" some letters
especially r's in the middle of words.
Now as for the R thing, and as it relates to New England-eze, I've got
proof that kids pick up the "boston accent" by osmosis or someother
method. My aunt and uncle had a very defined southern accent, my aunt
to this day sounds like she just fell off her Texas ranch, but hasn't
been there to live in 30+ years. My cousin, who is 30something had a
prounouced "Boston" accent by the time he was in second grade! I on
the other hand, have never lived outside of MA and still have a defined
"southern drawl", my son has a sort of mixed, Boston, Central MA and
southern flavor to his words. I guess that must be job security for
his speech pathologist!
Lyn
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176.10 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Mon Feb 21 1994 15:10 | 1 |
| Does her day-care provider have a New England accent?
|
176.11 | details on New England accent environment | CUPMK::STEINHART | | Tue Feb 22 1994 11:33 | 19 |
| None of her caregivers has had a pronounced New England accent, as best
I can recall. Babysitter she adored and was close to for much of 1993
had a moderate local accent. Current sitter is Canadian.
Boy, do I detest those dropped Rs. If this persists, the problem won't
be her speech, it will be my patience in tolerating the accent. Grrr.
I'd feel as if she came home with some awful trendy outfit. But the
accent doesn't ever go away. HELP! The only thing saving me now is
hope that its just a juvenile pronunciation problem.
(Other examples, "daycaya centuh," "tuh-kee dinnah," "present faw you".)
I know a NH family, 2 schoolkids born here, both parents from New York.
Oldest child doesn't have New England accent, youngest does.
Socialization, must be. The younger child is more self-confident, less
reliant on her parents. Bad news for my child's accent is that she's
extremely self-confident and outgoing.
L
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176.12 | | USCTR1::WOOLNER | Your dinner is in the supermarket | Tue Feb 22 1994 13:01 | 17 |
| I hate those dropped "aaaaaahs", too. A friend of mine took language
development courses and relayed to me that regional accents generally
"set" between the ages of 5 and 7... so you still have some time! (Of
course, accents can be modified, but this is the age bracket where you
need to be especially vigilant.)
I think the parent(s)' speech is the biggest influence on the
child(ren)'s accent, but the influence can be enhanced by attentive
parents. I've seen some parents who throw up their hands in
resignation at the first sign their child is speaking like a "local",
but the parent *can* reinforce correct speech and illustrate the
differences. I had an uphill battle with Alex over the word "mirror",
which she insisted on pronouncing "meer" (one syllable, one R). The
argument turned in my favor when she was old enough to read and would
accept a dictionary as a valid authority :-)
Leslie
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176.13 | whew, thanks, glad I still have a chance | CUPMK::STEINHART | | Tue Feb 22 1994 15:41 | 1 |
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176.14 | 5-6 years old for R's | GRANPA::LGRIMES | | Fri Feb 25 1994 13:28 | 5 |
| My 5 1/2 year old was in speech therapy last year and the therapist
said that children do not master the "r" sound until around 6 years of
age, so you do have a few years before she may say it correctly.
LG
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