1st Edition

Managing Children with Developmental Language Disorder Theory and Practice Across Europe and Beyond

    550 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    550 Pages 1 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Although most children learn language relatively quickly, as many as 10 per cent of them are slow to start speaking and are said to have developmental language disorder (DLD). Children with DLD are managed by a variety of different professionals in different countries, are offered different services for different periods of time and are given a variety of different therapeutic treatments. To date, there has been no attempt to evaluate these different practices. Managing Children with Developmental Language Disorder: Theory and Practice Across Europe and Beyond does just this, reporting on the findings of a survey carried out as part of the work of COST Action IS1406, a European research network.

    Law and colleagues analyse the results of a pan-European survey, looking at how different services are delivered in different counties, at the cultural factors underpinning such services and the theoretical frameworks used to inform practice in different countries. The book also provides a snapshot of international practices in a set of 35 country-specific "vignettes", providing a benchmark for future developments but also calling attention to the work of key practitioners and thinkers in each of the countries investigated.

    This book will be essential reading for practitioners working with children with language impairments, those commissioning services and policy in the field and students of speech and language therapy.

    Preface

    Maria Vlassopoulos & Baiba Trinite

     

    Part I Developmental language disorder in context

    Introduction

    James Law

    Chapter 1

    Evidence-based practice and its application to developmental language disorders

    James Law

    Chapter 2

    The development of the practitioner survey

    James Law, Josie Tulip & Elisabeth Beckermann

    Chapter 3

    Theory and intervention in developmental language disorder: The view of the European practitioner

    David Saldana and Carol-Anne Murphy

    Chapter 4

    Servoce delivery for children with language disorders across Europe and beyond

    Cristina McKean, Ellen Gerrits, Josie Tulip and Anna-Kasia Tolonen

    Chapter 5

    The social and cultural context of intervention for children with developmental language disorder

    Elin Thordardottir & Seyhun Topbaş

     

    Part II National vignettes

    Introduction

    James Law

    Austria

    Bosnia and Herzegovina

    Bulgaria

    Croatia

    Cyprus

    Denmark

    Estonia

    Finland

    France

    Germany

    Hungary

    Iceland

    Ireland

    Israel

    Italy

    Latvia

    Lebanon

    Lithuania

    Macedonia

    Malta

    The Netherlands

    Norway

    Poland

    Portugal

    Romania

    The Russian Federation

    Serbia

    Slovakia

    Slovenia

    South Africa

    Spain

    Sweden

    Switzerland

    Turkey

    The United Kingdom

     

    Index

    Biography

    James Law studied linguistics, practising as a speech and language therapist in the UK for ten years, and is currently Professor of Speech and Language Science, Newcastle University, UK. Having received over £5 million in research grant funding, his main focus has been on children’s language development over time and the science underpinning interventions to ameliorate developmental language disorders.

    Cristina McKean is a speech and language therapist and senior lecturer in speech pathology at Newcastle University, UK. She is honorary fellow at the Murdoch Children's Research Institute and adjunct fellow at the Menzies Institute, Griffith University, Australia, and editor-in-chief for the International Journal of Language and Communication Disorders. Her research aims to understand individual differences in child language development, the drivers and processes of developmental change and the effects of interventions and service delivery models on children’s trajectories.

    Carol-Anne Murphy lectures in speech and language therapy at the University of Limerick (UL), Ireland. She leads the child speech, language and communication needs research group at UL, whose work includes the development of school-based speech and language therapy services. Carol-Anne has a particular interest in understanding mechanisms of intervention, effective approaches to assessment, and intervention implementation in developmental communication difficulties, particularly developmental language disorder. 

    Elin Thordardottir, a certified speech-language pathologist and audiologist, conducts research and teaches in Canada as a professor at McGill University, and in Iceland, at the Academy of Reykjavik and the University of Iceland. This allows her to study typical language development and impairment in monolingual, bilingual and multilingual children in distinct linguistic environments and with a strong cross-linguistic focus. She has authored a number of clinical language measures in Icelandic and French.