Litcius/Paper detail

Personalized Early AAC Intervention to Build Language and Literacy Skills

Janice Light, Allison Barwise, Ann Marie Gardner, Molly Flynn

2021Topics in Language Disorders25 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Personalized AAC intervention refers to an approach in which intervention is tailored to the individual's needs and skills, the needs and priorities of the individual's family and other social environments, the evidence base, and the individual's response to intervention. This approach is especially relevant to AAC intervention for young children with complex communication needs given their unique constellations of strengths and challenges, and the qualitative and quantitative changes that they experience over time as they develop, as well as the diversity of their families, schools, and communities. This paper provides detailed documentation of personalized AAC intervention over a six-month period for a 3-year-old girl with developmental delay and complex communication needs. The paper describes (1) personalization of multimodal AAC supports to provide this child with the tools to communicate; (2) personalized intervention to build semantic and morphosyntactic skills; and, (3) personalized instruction in literacy skills (i.e., letter-sound correspondences, sound blending, decoding, sight word recognition, reading simple stories, reading comprehension, and encoding skills). Specific goals, instructional materials, and procedures are described; data on speech, language, and literacy outcomes are presented.

Topics & Concepts

Augmentative and alternative communicationIntervention (counseling)PsychologyLiteracyDocumentationPersonalizationReading (process)Reading comprehensionComprehensionShared readingPedagogyComputer scienceLinguisticsWorld Wide WebPhilosophyPsychiatryProgramming languageAssistive Technology in Communication and MobilityLanguage Development and DisordersAutism Spectrum Disorder Research