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Specific Language Impairment (SLI) occurs in 6.3% of children,
twice as much in males than females. Deficits in phonology may
include difficulties with early speech sound production, and/or
weak phonological awareness skills, resulting in struggles with
reading and writing. Chapter 1 reviews the most relevant research
published that informs the definition, identification and treatment
of expressive language impairment (ELI) in children ages 3 to 10
years old, with a focus on phonetic and phonological interventions.
Chapter 2 explores the place of coarticulation in the
phonology/phonetics dichotomy, relating coarticulating to what may
in essence be viewed as its phonological counterpart -
assimilation. Chapter 3 addresses how an approach based on
phonological principles can be a reliable method for the speech
intervention in children with cleft palate and compensatory
articulation errors. A categorically stratified scale for
classifying compensatory articulation errors according to severity
and response to therapy is described. Finally, some strategies for
speech intervention which are more suitable for a phonological and
linguistic intervention are presented. The chapter explains how is
that selecting the strategies to be used during the intervention
according the severity of the articulation errors seem to increase
their effectiveness.
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