Stage 2 NLA
Last time we asked: is our child ready tp move to Stage 2 NLA (Natural Language Acquisition stage 2) and we looked at how we can know. Now we know: he/she is ready, they are mixing and matching those scripts quite liberally! Hurrah!
So for example we hear phrases like:
- ‘let’s go’+ ‘downstairs’
- ‘it’s’ + ‘downstairs’
- ‘I see it’ + ‘downstairs‘
- ‘I want to’ + ‘shoes downstairs’ (I want to put my shoes on downstairs)
To recap, it’s important to listen out to a variety of contexts because if we only hear the single version of a gestalt —this is so great, hurrah!— but that’s not yet Stage 2.
What we can now do on a daily basis to help and support at this time:
1. We need to offer more ‘mix and match’ phrases to help our child establish this new way of communicating.
Good phrases:
- It’s … raining / cooking / eating / washing / brushing
- That’s … great / cool / amazing / wow / so good
- Let’s … see / look / go / run / chase
- How’bout … some food / playing / I’ll chase / sleeping / we read a book
- I see a … bird / large car / fire engine
- I wanna … have a biscuit / have a book / have a snuggle
- We’re … going out / going home / going in the car / going upstairs
Here in my video clip of train play I use:
- Let’s go
- It’s going up the hill
- It’s coming down
- Ooops it falls!
- It’s stopping
- Let’s put on another parcel
- Ready steady go
- Off we go
- It’s come off!
- Let’s fix it
- I can do it
- I don’t need help
You can offer these gestalts either with an AAC as you can see me do in the video clip or you can just verbally offer these.
2. Watch out for Pronoun confusion or reversal:
Gestalt kids repeat gestalts, so we don’t want to create ‘pronoun reversal’.
Instead model from a:
- first person perspective: ‘I’ / ‘Our’ / ‘Us’
- joint perspective: ‘We’ / ‘Let’s’ or a
- neutral perspective: ‘It’
You can turn almost any sentence into a good language model once you get used to it. And you can avoid ‘you’ and ‘your’ at the same time!
So instead of saying, ‘Do you want to go to the park?’
You could say:
- We wanna go to the park?
- Let’s go out?
- Shall we go out / to the park?
3. Start providing ‘variation’ in your language modelling:
Instead of just modelling something one way, start thinking about offering a pattern in a couple of other ways, in a couple of different situations, then several ways in several different situations.
Example: once you hear your child saying: ‘it’s raining’ and you know it’s a mitigation, because you don’t often say ‘it’s raining’, or haven’t said it in a while and you know your child says other ‘it’s’ phrases.
Repeat: ‘it’s raining!’
Then: ‘it’s’ + ‘raining hard’ / ‘it’s wet out there’ / ‘It’s’ + ‘raining lot’s’.
Then later think of other combinations for ‘it’s’ + ‘something’:
- (rice) ‘It’s’ + ‘cooking’
- (water/tap) ‘It’s’ + ‘running’
- (radio) ‘It’s’ + ‘singing
- (dog) ‘It’s’ + ‘peeing’ / ‘it’s’ + ‘running’ / ‘it’s’ + ‘jumping’
In my train video clip:
- Let’s go
- It’s going
- Let’s make it go
- Ready steady go
- Oops its gone
4. Use natural intonation that shows you really mean what you’re saying.
You can be animated or try for musical if your child prefers that / doesn’t mind you singing —they might not like it if their hearing is pitch perfect and your singing is off key…—
- ‘I’m’ + ‘trying to find you!’ (animated, goofy face)
- ‘I’m’ +’ getting tired!’ (exaggerated stretch and yawn)
- ‘I’m’ + ‘catching up with you!’ (animated goofy)
- ‘I’m’ + ‘gonna get you!’ (animated goofy)
- ‘I’m’ + ‘sad right now’ (exaggerated face and tone of voice)
5. USE SILENCE!
Important, I might not have said this before but we need to hold back sometimes (hard I know) and not constantly offer models. Let our child sit in a bit of silence with us there just observing and waiting for their own offers. This is a very important point. Silence is golden sometimes. Try it out. I am not talking about the silence that comes with a person scrolling on their phone though, we do need to be present and receptive.
You will see this works wonders!
Do get in touch if you would like some in-person or on-line 1:1 support with this. It can be overwhelming to figure it all out alone.
You can also check my friend’s lovely handmade jewelry on her website.
Find a speech and language therapist for your child in London. Are you concerned about your child’s speech, feeding or communication skills and don’t know where to turn? Please contact me and we can discuss how I can help you or visit my services page.