Fort Worth, TX,
13
April
2023
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13:27 PM
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Helping Children With Autism Communicate With CLEaR Speech

For Autism Awareness Month, Lee Mason, Licensed Behavior Analyst, describes how parents and families can practice language instruction at home using the CLEaR Speech method.

Written by Lee Mason, Licensed Behavior Analyst at Cook Children's Child Study Center

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a life-long neurodevelopmental disability characterized by communication and social skills deficits, in addition to restrictive and repetitive behavior. Recently, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention updated their estimates, which now show that one out of every 36 children in the US has ASD. If your own family has not been directly impacted by ASD, chances are you know someone who has.

Autism impacts many different areas of an individual’s life, and Cook Children’s Child Study Center offers medical, psychological, behavioral, speech, and academic services to help address the unique needs of each individual child with ASD.

Perhaps the most fundamental skill affected by ASD is a child’s ability to communicate. Less than half of children with ASD will develop fluent speech by age 8, and approximately ¼ will remain nonverbal, relying on an alternative form of communication to interact with others.Autism column

Regardless of how your child speaks, you can help bolster their ability to communicate by focusing on four critical areas of language development.

What is CLEaR Speech?

Research on language development has identified four critical areas of communication that may require systematic intervention: Conversing, Labeling, Echoing, and Requesting (CLEaR). You can help your child develop CLEaR speech by practicing each of these language domains during their everyday play. For example, suppose your child enjoys playing with a toy train:

Conversing: Can they say the name of the toy when it is described? Ask your child to fill-in-the-blank using a description of a toy that they are not currently playing with. For example, say, “Choo, choo goes the ….”

Labeling: Can they say the name of the toy when it is present? Ask your child to say the name of the toy they are holding. For example, give the train to your child and ask, “What is that?”

Echoing: Can they say the name of the toy when you name it? Ask your child to repeat the name of a toy that they are not currently playing with. For example, say “Say, ‘Train.’”

Requesting: Can they say the name of the toy when it is absent? Ask your child to say the name of the toy they want to play with. For example, hide the train from your child and ask, “What do you want?”

Note that you have asked the child to say the word train four different times. It is the different contexts that make each word unique. Many children with ASD have some ability to label or echo, but struggle with conversing and requesting. Others may only speak when requesting preferred items. The goal of CLEaR speech is to help the child understand the different contexts in which a word can be used, and to gradually develop their language abilities in each area through a process called abstraction.

Abstracting CLEaR Speech

[1] Mario is not a real child, but an amalgamation of different patients treated in Autism Services.

To demonstrate the process of abstraction, let me introduce you to Mario[1], a 4-year-old boy receiving early intensive behavioral intervention through Child Study Center’s Autism Services department. Mario’s parents noticed his lack of eye contact early on, and had trouble engaging him when he was an infant. 

As a toddler, Mario did not respond to sounds (e.g., he did not look up when called by name), and his parents suspected hearing loss. They were surprised when he received an ASD diagnosis at age 3. Though Mario sporadically repeats phrases from his favorite TV shows, he lacks the ability to express his basic wants and needs. He may lead mom to the refrigerator when he is hungry, but often resorts to tantrums until his parents can guess what he wants. Mario’s parents use CLEaR speech to help him learn to request his favorite things. 

Autism column (1)

They begin by letting Mario choose what he is going to talk about, by simply allowing him to select a toy or snack. Whenever his interest shifts, they will direct his speech toward the new activity. Throughout his play, Mario’s parents alter the different environmental configurations that support Mario’s CLEaR speech. Mario picks up his toy car and rolls it down a ramp. His parents use the following sequence to help strengthen Mario’s ability to request by purposefully changing the non-critical details of requesting across each step:

CLEaR: After the car goes down the ramp, Mom picks it up. She shows it to Mario (labeling), and says, “Drive the car” (echoing), “Drive the …” (conversing). When Mario requests, “Car,” she enthusiastically repeats, “Car!” and hands it back to Mario so he can put it down the ramp again.

LER: After the car goes down the ramp, Dad picks it up. He shows it to Mario (labeling), and says, “Car.” (Echoing). When Mario requests, “Car,” he enthusiastically repeats, “Car!” and hands it back to Mario so he can put it down the ramp again. 

CLR: After the car goes down the ramp, Mom picks it up. She shows it to Mario (labeling), and says, “Drive the …” (conversing). When Mario requests, “Car,” she enthusiastically repeats, “Car!” and hands it back to Mario so he can put it down the ramp again.

CER: After the car goes down the ramp, Mom picks it up and hides it. She says, “Vroom, vroom goes the car” (echoing), “Drive the …” (conversing). When Mario requests, “Car,” she enthusiastically repeats, “Car!” and hands it back to Mario so he can put it down the ramp again.

LR: After the car goes down the ramp, Dad picks it up. He shows it to Mario (labeling). When Mario requests, “Car,” he enthusiastically repeats, “Car!” and hands it back to Mario so he can put it down the ramp again.

ER: After the car goes down the ramp, Mom picks it up and hides it. She says, “Car.’” (Echoing). When Mario requests, “Car,” she enthusiastically repeats, “Car!” and hands it back to Mario so he can put it down the ramp again.

CR: After the car goes down the ramp, Dad picks it up and hides it. He says, “Drive the …” (conversing). When Mario requests, “Car,” he enthusiastically repeats, “Car!” and hands it back to Mario so he can put it down the ramp again.

R: After the car goes down the ramp, Dad picks it up and hides it. When Mario requests, “Car,” he enthusiastically repeats, “Car!” and hands it back to Mario so he can put it down the ramp again.

The order of the steps is less important than the variation of supports across steps. Children with ASD may rely heavily on a particular aspect of their environment, like the presence of the toy. We can use that feature to help support their language development, while also helping the child become more responsive to changes in their environment. 

The presence of the toy is necessary for labeling, but it shouldn’t also be necessary for requesting. It may take repeated practice with one step before your child is ready to move onto the next. Similar abstractions can be arranged to strengthen conversing, labeling, and echoing skills. While language development comes naturally for many children, others require targeted intervention. If you have questions about your child’s language development or concerns that your child may have ASD, speak with your pediatrician and contact Early Childhood Intervention or your local public school to find out what services are available to your family.

Cook Children's Child Study Center

Child Study Center Cook Children's (CSC) provides children with complex developmental and behavioral disabilities with the highest quality diagnosis, treatment, and education, to help them achieve their full potential. Developmental and behavioral challenges are frequently multi-dimensional. At Child Study Center, not only do we understand that, we embrace it.