Late-Talking Children
By Thomas
Sowell in Townhall.com
Anyone who
knows what anxiety, and sometimes anguish, parents go through when they have a
child who is still not talking at age two, three or even four, can appreciate
what a blessing it can be to have someone who can tell them what to do -- and
what not to do.
That someone is
Professor Stephen Camarata of the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, whose
recently published book, "Late-Talking Children" gives parents
information and advice that they are not likely to find anywhere else. And it
does so in plain English.
Professor
Camarata has been researching, diagnosing and treating children with speech
problems for decades. Moreover, he knows from personal experience what it is
like to be a parent of a late-talking child, and he himself was three and a
half years old before he began to speak. So he has seen this problem from many
angles.
A child can be
years behind schedule in beginning to speak and yet go on to have a perfectly
normal life. Some children with delayed speech may even be noticeably brighter
than other children their age. But, for other late-talking children, the delay
in beginning to speak can be a symptom of much deeper and long-lasting
problems, including mental retardation or autism.
Most parents
are in no position to know which of these very different conditions applies to
their own child. Nor is it easy to find out, because there are so many people
so ready to put labels on late-talking children that can follow these children
for years, even when these labels have no solid foundation.
False diagnoses
of late-talking children are by no means rare. Even Albert Einstein was thought
to be retarded, when he failed to talk at an age when most other toddlers begin
to speak. Three renowned nuclear physicists who were involved in the creation
of the first atomic bomb had been late-talking children.
Late-talking
children can be at any intellectual level, from the lowest to the highest. But
it is hard to know what their intellectual level is when they are not saying
anything.
In his clinical
research at Vanderbilt University, Stephen Camarata has devised some ways of
discovering what a late-talking toddler knows and understands. But these
methods work only when the child cooperates -- and cooperation is not universal
among very young children.
When he cannot
get enough cooperation from a child to make a reliable diagnosis, Camarata
simply tells the parents that he will have to wait until the child becomes more
mature, which may be months later or a year or more later. A false diagnosis is
worse than no diagnosis.
Unfortunately,
too many other people who diagnose late-talking children are not always so
careful or so candid. Some rely on checklists of "symptoms" or on
even less reliable criteria.
The net result
is too often an unreliable diagnosis of retardation or autism that devastates
the parents, and leads to counterproductive treatment for the child.
As the parent
of such a child, I remember all too well what the problems are like. But there
was no book like this available then. When my son was old enough to take an
intelligence test, his IQ turned out to be well above the national average.
Stephen
Camarata's "Late-Talking Children" goes into these and other pitfalls
that parents of such children need to watch out for. He also explains what
science knows -- and does not know -- about some of the possible reasons why
children talk late.
Professor
Camarata urges parents to get the most reliable diagnosis they can -- and an
independent second opinion, when they have any doubts. Above all, he warns them
not to park their common sense at the door when they seek either diagnosis or
treatment for their child. Too much is at stake to put blind faith in anyone.
Although most
parents of late-talking children simply heave a sigh of relief when their child
finally begins to talk, Camarata's book warns that there are often behavior
patterns common among such children, even after they have learned to speak --
and that these patterns may conflict with the rigidities of many public
schools.
In a brief
review, it is not possible to do justice to the extremely valuable and very
readable book that Stephen Camarata has written. It will be like a bright light
shining into the darkness for many worried and puzzled parents of children who
are years behind schedule in beginning to speak.
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