My ds1 had 3 words at age 18 months. His hearing was fine and he communicated well otherwise. We could tell he was very bright, but he just wasn't talking. In addition, he had very few sounds. He basically was quiet, except for whining and grunting.
We felt something was wrong and had him evaled by a speech pathologist. Turns out he had a very tight frenulum. At age 20 months, we had it surgically corrected and by age 24 months with the help of speech therapy, he had about 20 words, and more importantly, he was begininning to make different sounds.
After age 2, he progressed quickly and was appropriate for age level by age 2.25 and was d/c'd from therapy. And today, he's 3.5 and has amazing speech and vocabulary.
Personally, I think there was more to his speech delay then just the frenulum.
If you are concerned about your dd, then read up on what is normal for a child her age. If she is well below what is considered the norm, then I would have her evaled. I know some here take more of a 'watch and wait' approach, but imo, speech development or the lack thereof is an important issue and a simple speech eval is non-traumatic and non-invasive. And truthfully, I think 24 months is the cut-off for the 'watch and wait' approach anyway. I think most peds automatically eval (or at least order evals) for all 2 year olds with little to no speech.
Quote:
| I didn't speak until I was 10...One day, my mom gave me a bowl of soup. I took one taste, and I told her that it was cold. Mom was shocked and asked me why I didn't speak earlier. I told her that there wasn't anything worth saying before then. |
Hmm, I wasn't under the impression that the OP was looking for jokes here. That's the oldest speech pathologist joke in the book. 10 years old and not talking, yeah right.
