J.B. asks from Murrieta, CA on March 06, 2012
22 Month Old
Hi Moms,
Please let me start by saying if you having nothing nice to say please dont respond. As it is I feel like I'm failing here. So my 22 month old son is good on listening, giving love, dancing, jumping with two feet and just straight having fun. But he isn't talking. He says maybe 10+ words. Mama, dada, no, stop it, dont, car, blue, yes, up, off, ball but the only ones he uses in the correct context is dada, mama, up, off, stop and no. I know you can't compare children but all of his cousins have had at least 100+ words at this age. My husband didn't speak till a very late age and had to go to speech therapy because he couldn't get his r's and s' right. I on the other hand had a very extensive vocabulary before kindergarten. My son is the only child and not a preemie. So, I'm thinking at his 2 year check up I am going to have the doctor refer us to speech therapy. So, I guess my question is...is this normal? Have any of you moms experienced this and everything turned out okay? Any info can help, thank you Mama's!
As a side note, I am a working mom and my husband works part time and a live in nanny on the other days. We try really hard to practice words but he just doesn't seem to focus. At times when something is interesting he is game for learning new things. He just doesn't seem into learning words.
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G.B. answers from Oklahoma City on March 06, 2012
My grandson was evaluated at 22 months for not talking. He failed miserably. But the next few weeks he started talking in paragraphs. It takes time. I would not worry since he is saying some words. I think he'll be fine. Even if he does do speech therapy it isn't the end of the world. He will eventually talk up a storm.
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B.M. answers from Los Angeles on March 06, 2012
My son was a late talker. When he was 18 months we scheduled an evaluation with our local Regional Center. Before our appointment, we got a referral from our pediatrician to an audiologist and had a hearing test so we could have that ruled out.
Contact your local regional center. It may be this:
INLAND REGIONAL CENTER
1365 South Waterman Avenue
San Bernardino, CA 92408
P.O. Box 6127
San Bernadino, CA 92412
909/890-4711 | FAX: 909/890-4709
www.inlandrc.org
They will test him with both a speech therapist and an occupational therapist. In our case, my son's receptive speech was right on target, but his expressive speech was delayed. Everything else was normal. We got speech therapy twice a week, then also 3 half days of preschool. There is no harm in having him checked out and it will make you feel better. There is also nothing wrong with having a speech delay. It happens a lot.
I would also like to add that everyone I knew said to wait, boys talk later, he'll start speaking in sentences, blah blah blah. None of that happened, even with speech therapy. It did happen eventually, but I know that if we didn't get therapy, we would be having a serious problem right now.
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J.V. answers from Chicago on March 07, 2012
Practice words? What do you mean by this?
Do you repeat everything he does say to you? Do you give him the words for what he is trying to communicate? So let's say he wants a cup of water, do you say "cup of water" to him when he points and grunts? Words serve functions, and the best way for kids to learn language is through dialogical, one-on-one interactions that are meaningful to the child. When he wants something, give him the words. There is no need for drilling or practicing, or anything other than feeding him the words for what he is currently trying to communicate. So if he wants the light on, say "light on."
All kids develop at different rates. But, amazingly, by 7, they are all roughly at the same place. Some kids are early talkers, some late. Therapy may help some kids, but for many others, that extra 6-9 months of time to develop may be all that was needed.
You should see a massive language explosion in the next two months. If you don't, then you should talk to your Dr. but the leap from 22 to 25 months is amazing.
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G.B. answers from Oklahoma City on March 06, 2012
My grandson was evaluated at 22 months for not talking. He failed miserably. But the next few weeks he started talking in paragraphs. It takes time. I would not worry since he is saying some words. I think he'll be fine. Even if he does do speech therapy it isn't the end of the world. He will eventually talk up a storm.
2 moms found this helpful
J.B. answers from Los Angeles on March 06, 2012
its normal... my friends son turns 3 in september and just over the last 2-3 months had a huge jump in vocab and talking. give it time dont rush into speech therapy. i agree talk with his dr about your concerns they will know if he really needs the speech therapy. good luck!
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C.S. answers from Milwaukee on March 07, 2012
Our daughter just turned 2 last month and she is the same way. Our ped referred us to ST and a person came out for the eval. What came out of it was 'don't worry about it'. Really. Our daughter is very strong cognitively-understands everything we say, can show us what she wants, etc...in our case she probably just doesn't feel the need to talk much because 1-we understand her version of talking and 2-her 4 yr old brother talks enough for both of them! The ST said she'd check back in 3 mo, but that most likely it will just come when she's ready. And in hindsight unlike my son who was one of those kids you could write a book by and hit every milestone when they say a kid should, (or before), she has done everything at her own pace...from rolling over to walking to this...
So-is it normal, I think totally and even if they decide he needs some ST it is still totally normal.
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M.L. answers from Chicago on March 07, 2012
Hi J. - my son was 18 months and saying only a couple of words - SO MANY people kept telling me "boys take longer" "everyone is different" "wait and see", etc. etc. etc.
I am SO GLAD I did not take these approaches - I got my son evaluated and he started speech therapy. He is now 5 and the therapy is no longer necessary - he's extremely articulate.
Get the evaluation - you are your childs best advocate - trust yourself!!
Best of luck to you and your family.
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E.B. answers from Los Angeles on March 08, 2012
Do Not Fret! He is the only child so there is no sibling to mimick. Some children are more in their heads or more active than verbal. I would encourage learning games and play movies that have words shown on the screen so he can visualize even if he does not verbalize. I would also watch him to see if he is active, or puts puzzles together or blocks. You'll be able to see how he will be as he gets older. He could be an engineer or something. Then talk to the pediatrician, go to a speech therapist if it feels right and relax. You are a GOOD MOM for worrying and paying attention to his development, but no need to let it wear you down. Good luck. He may be chatting your ears off before your know it! :)
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J.W. answers from Los Angeles on March 08, 2012
I have 4 children and all were different. I, however, was concerned about my last baby because "other" people would make comments. I was fine with her little points and grunts but others (friends and family) would sometimes cause me to grow concerned. I always knew that she was insightful and would let them know...."She's just paying attention, soaking it all in and will talk when she is ready to say something spectacular". :)
My 15 yr old daughter was a talker but she is also very quiet when she first meets people...looking them over, taking them in. She is an excellent student and very aware and insighftul. My youngest (with whom I felt the pressure) is now 4. She did not converse until well into her 2's and has a vocabulary that outshines those around her. I have found that when children are around mostly adults, they learn to listen and take it in. My 4 yr old is a perfect example of this and her Phonics teacher at Pre-K let me know that she is advanced with her vocabulary and abilities..(I'm not a bragger at all...not a one upper mom...so I found this comforting but not my goal...I am more the mom that wants happy and secure children :)
With that, I just want you to know that if your little person is loved and around you and your hubby living in your world, he is taking it all in. He will have so much to say to you very soon and I can't wait until he does so you can just smile and breath a sigh of relief. Until then, enjoy him and know, he will always be amazing with a concerned and aware mommy such as yourself.
:)
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