Can I Help My Child With Receptive Language Acquisition?
Before a child can be reasonably expected to say the name of something, they should be able to point to it, give it, touch it, or in some way indicate that yes, they know what that thing is. Use our RISE (Receptive Identification Single Exemplar) and RIME (Receptive Identification Multiple Exemplars) tools to teach listener responding skills to your learner. Language delays can be frustrating for learners and stressful for their parents. Questions like “why isn’t my child talking?” or “does my child have autism?” can be overwhelming. ABA acronyms and terms can be intimidating to many parents, teachers, and therapists, but aba|tools provides video tutorials, ABA resources, and a community of support.
Tips for Teaching Receptive Language
aba|tools offers listener response modules in fields of 2-10 including selection of single or multiple targets. A target is an object the child is trying to identify. Field size refers to the number of selections available to the learner. Field size is important! Early learners may only be able to differentiate between two items, so using a field of two is an effective starting point. Try using a “blank distractor” if a field of two images is challenging. By increasing the field size over time, learners improve their scanning and tracking skills.
A distractor is an image meant to distract from the target. Distractors, or images that are not the target image, can vary in similarity to the target. Having distractors become more and more similar over time will challenge the learner to make conditional discriminations based on what was said and what is presented rather than on listening for one key word and making a selection based on that.
Don’t always say the same thing in the same way. Resist the urge to use “up tones” in speech. When asking a child to take a seat, if you always say “sit down” in a sing-song voice, a child who struggles with receptive language might respond to the tone more than the words. Parents and teachers often use these tones to help children feel at ease, but this can cause confusion for a child with receptive language delays.