►► Learn how to teach your child from no words to sentences and beyond: www.agentsofspeech.com/course
@pushingggdaisies22 сағат бұрын
My biggest issue with some of these kids shows are the amount of cut scenes and pacing of the shows. Their attention spans are already short, let’s not intentionally shorten them even more. We’re supposed to be doing the opposite! We’re supposed to be teaching them to pay attention for a long time. I don’t think all TV is bad for children, but I think limits should be applied to children early to make sure that we aren’t damaging their attention spans, imagination, and creativity. 🌷 Sometimes as a parent you need like 30 minutes to get something done without your toddler interrupting or just need a moment alone while they are doing their own thing. I opt for slower paced, calm, educational shows. And my daughter has three other people besides me that she talks to all day so screen time hasn’t really affected her speech like it probably would if people weren’t always talking to her throughout the day. ❤
@chidoigwe7644Күн бұрын
How can I help 7yr child with speech Delay., I really need help
@mihiretasfawgirma2504Күн бұрын
thank you ❤❤❤
@robyncalvosa2064Күн бұрын
Thank you so much great! Information 👍🌺🤗
@jameskim197Күн бұрын
Thank you for the video! :)
@NakeishaClunisКүн бұрын
My son is like that. He sings. but he know like up and down, open shut. Bug and some other things, but he doesn't respond to his name or understand or listen to instructions or have a conversation with me. He's 2.5yrs. He pulls me to what he wants, but when I don't understand what ne needs he gets frustrated and have tantrums
@jameskim1972 күн бұрын
Thank you for this video !!
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
My pleasure!
@raisa_heaven3 күн бұрын
Trust this guy! Ming talks business! I am a linguist so I was successful in becoming a home therapist for my child. My experience of success with Ming’s methodology is real. You can learn too! Don’t shy away! There will be moments of plato and you being scared. I hope the next level will come to your child. 1) being a home therapist 2) being an interesting person for you child 3) being as entertaining as if you can beat the tablet in completion over your child’s attention 4) showing reaction to right and wrong as if you are the best dog/dolphin coach 5) balancing with not too easy and not too challenging with new word forms 6) choosing books and toys that your imagination acan use for therapy 7) lots of intake, if you see a second of hesitation support with an option to say, with experience child will learn to differentiate between you-teacher and your-interlocutor
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
You're the best Raisa =D Thank you for always commenting here - I know you only use our free KZbin material, but if you do have time, please do leave us a testimonial here: testimonial.to/agents-of-speech/all
@sukkatdavid33654 күн бұрын
I left a comment about my son a couple of months ago and wanted to update (unfortunately I forget where the comment is). He has a speech delay and two months ago we took him to a speech therapist who suspected autism. Forwarding two or so months, at 21 months, all our suspicions are gone. He shows no signs of ASD other than the speech. He's changed so much in a short time. This is a huge relief but also confusing. He has excellent receptive language, whether it's commands or vocabulary. Started daycare recently, shows interest in peers, participates and imitates, responds to name, great eye contact, points often, joint attention.. it's all there. He can point to almost all parts of his body (or other's people's) when asked (chin, elbow, eyebrows, knees etc). Also he's advanced in some things like puzzles (can do complex ones for his age), and has pretty good motor skills. Yet his words on a daily basis are mostly "no" and "come" and "knock knock" when he wants us to open something (the latter two, we basically taught him when we realized he's delayed). Less common are "ball", "where", some attempt at the the sequence "two three four" and the rest is mostly sounds (animals, transportation, instruments etc). Dada and mama also only sometimes. That's about it. I'm not sure what to make of it. (Oh, and most of this he says in Hebrew, cause that's what we speak).
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
I really want to read all comments on youtube and remember everyone here. However that's impossible... Would you mind telling us on our private community instead? www.skool.com/aos
@heatherl47325 күн бұрын
ABA saved our family. The BCBA, RBTs, even the clinical director made a plan specific to our kiddo and they became a staple in our family so much that years later I still keep them close. We were initially told our kiddo would never be able to attend school, wouldn’t really learn anything like a math concept (also has intellectual disorder), wouldn’t participate with peers, no independence with ADLs, etc. Negative behaviors were a severe challenge at first but, the work that was put in and the extinction bursts for certain things was more than worth it. Teaching in the way that they need to learn has also made a huge difference, people think that intellectual disorder prevents learning but, it may not…they just learn in a different way is all. My kiddo is now in a school specifically for children with ASD, rides a bus, can identify numbers 1-20, knows the entire alphabet, combines words using cards, uses the potty, washes hands, sits and completes busy books at their table, puzzles, games and communicates with their device when they want space or a break. It was a hard process that was mentally tolling but if you get a great team behind you for ABA and allow the exchange of info with everyone else involved, your child and your family could have a much better quality of life. If you get a bad team and people are not replacing negative behaviors or working with your child like they need to…you need to speak up for your child. The best thing I did was learn about ABA and the function of behaviors, having that knowledge and learning all I could make a huge difference when it came to implementing the plan at home. Don’t be scared by ABA, it could potentially change your life if you as the parent stay highly involved.
@Uni-Shop9095 күн бұрын
Thank you !
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
you're welcome
@janedough85606 күн бұрын
Should a non verbal 4yr do ABA,speech therapy, occupational therapy and physical therapy? She doesn't respond to her name. She doesn't respond to directions. She still babbles like an infant. I've heard bad things about ABA.
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
you should check out our community - search there and you'll get the answers: www.skool.com/aos
@AgentsofSpeech6 күн бұрын
►► Learn how to teach your child from no words to sentences and beyond: www.agentsofspeech.com/course
@PlusVK227 күн бұрын
The more my kids watch Ms. Rachel, the more they express anger and angry faces and say things like "it's okay to be mad!" and "I want juice!" 😱... When they watch shows like Holy Sprouts, my kids express more joy and respect. Now they say "Can I have juice, please?" ❤
@Bukkumi228 күн бұрын
Thank you so much, sir! ✍️
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
Most welcome!
@priyashankar16048 күн бұрын
True true... Thank you... Thanks a lot 😊
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
So nice of you
@mhaliaa8 күн бұрын
❤❤❤❤❤ good job
@mrsjayellelovesyou8 күн бұрын
What about if a child only speaks or uses communication when made or really in need. Like when they want to stop something or they are super hungry but won't communicate in general
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
watch the free courses: www.skool.com/aos
@happykiddospeech8 күн бұрын
This is misleading information
@AgentsofSpeech16 сағат бұрын
do correct us
@ChrispusMwangi-z3v8 күн бұрын
I have a 18 year brother who is autistic and he does not clearly talk but from this video i got some skill to deal with him.may you add more video clips so that we continue building strongs bond with autistic people and let them see their value in their life. Thank you
@joyobessa13643 күн бұрын
Amen 🙏🏾
@ChrispusMwangi-z3v8 күн бұрын
I have a 18 year brother who is autistic and he does not clearly talk but from this video i got some skill to deal with him.may you add more video clips so that we continue building strongs bond with autistic people and let them see their value in their life. Thank you
@gayansenanayake37848 күн бұрын
Totally Agreed
@gvschannel80089 күн бұрын
Thank you so much Ming. I have read your free courses and joined your community. Please don't get tired of teaching us. We need your guidance. More power to you.
@AgentsofSpeechКүн бұрын
thank you for using our materials
@haniahmed75349 күн бұрын
Hi my son is 13yrs but still only saying few routine wards how can I improve him as a mother thank you so much
@multiyapples9 күн бұрын
I don’t like cocomelon.
@j0cal_s9 күн бұрын
Thank you so much!! I'm so happy that I found your videos. I find your content very informative, practical, and very useful.
@jazz37999 күн бұрын
It’s not that learning a phrase is ‘easier than learning the words individually’. It’s that it is easier for the child to learn new words if you teach the child using a gestalt phrase of theirs. For example, if the child says “oh, so yummy!” As a gestalt already, then you add, and subtract words from that sentence to give them more flexibility. I suppose you are correct in a way that this mixes in analytical language acquisition. The key is still always acknowledging and working with the child’s more natural learning path. I have done what you scoffed at though, and taught entire new phrases to my child before using the approach I outlined earlier. I made vocab books with simple phrases such as “I see a ____” and “I like a ____” and once she got the hang of the original phrase we began plugging new words into the sentence and eventually moved to spontaneous sentence construction using the bones of the original phrase. We don’t use this approach as much anymore because she is not as pathologically resistant to repeating words after me anymore so it isn’t as necessary to start with such a a rigid phrase. Another key point to of working with this learning style is remembering to give whole examples, in context, from the beginning. Introducing information in small chunks over a period of time is such a normal approach to teaching that I struggle to remember that it is actually a disservice to a gestalt learner much of the time.
@anferneecephas128310 күн бұрын
I am a board-certified behavior analyst and you need a masters degree, pass the boards and pass the state licensure exam.
@AgentsofSpeech9 күн бұрын
Most BCBA I know are supervisors, not direct front line - that's what I meant
@sillyfilly552811 күн бұрын
G5 is awesome, such sad news
@sillyfilly552811 күн бұрын
Can’t speech delay be a symptom of autism ?
@esparda0712 күн бұрын
My niece has non-verbal autism at 4 years old. Her parents went gung ho with everything under the sun to make her talk. They're blinded by expectation. On the other hand, as an observer, the most important part is just being there for the kid and treat her as a kid.
@heavenlypickler12 күн бұрын
The child learns phrases better than a single word because that's how their brains process/function. My autistic son is a Gestalt language learner. It's reality, not theory. Sorry, you are wrong.
@susannakanagy5713 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for your work. This is exactly why we took our daughter out of conventional speech therapy and are working at home.
@Sodainspace13 күн бұрын
My kid only started talking at 2 years old and barely, he started saying full sentences at 3 years old. However since then he struggles with stuttering, the doctor said no need for speech therapy but he didn’t get better, he’s 4 year old now and considering speech therapy very soon
@davidalmaliach925413 күн бұрын
Came from sunnyV2,great video
@Filmedbyhaydenn13 күн бұрын
im watching this because of my sister, she is six and she can say words but only talks to my mom dad and me and my other sister nobody else, she never talks at school sports anything this helped a lot and i am very concerned for her and want to help her a lot,thank you!
@dealingdevelopmentaldelaya774213 күн бұрын
Sir how to teach ludo and snake ladder rules to these kids...I m a mom from India and it would b v kind of you if you make video 4:44 from the same
@sherylpevlog13 күн бұрын
I have a 2 yrs.old and 8mo.son this inspires me a lot I'll going to try this to him to teach him to speak so far the only word that he knows is Mommy and Daddy..
@jaciegagala763214 күн бұрын
My son when he was 14 mo old he would say hello momma daddy and just babble then it was always momma for a few months then just daddy for a few months. Then he just stops. He’s 2 now. A few months ago we tried to give him something to eat and he said I’m done!! That same night he said his sisters name when she walked into the house. Then he didn’t say anything for a few weeks. We would leave and I would say tell your sister bye see you later he would wave and say e you ater. He said this for a few weeks when we would leave then he stopped. For done he doesn’t use the d he can say a few letters and for numbers he doesn’t the whole word for example he would say e for 3 o for 2 for 4 he doesn’t say the f 6 is ix…. We always talked to him when he was a baby and sing songs did the same as he got older. He is trying and does get frustrated because he can’t talk.
@SamyarSamyarj14 күн бұрын
i am a 10 year old child i can say that if you let your kid watch cocomelon they would be glued to the tv and do NOTHING but rather watch cocomelon if parents are reading this NEVER let your kid watch cocomelon
@cherriejoychavez205014 күн бұрын
Thank you Ming. This advice is what I need right now❤
@RepentNLive14 күн бұрын
Thanks for your eduction I suggest you slower the pace at which you talk for beginners to fully understand you and apply your ideas. Thanks
@AgentsofSpeech14 күн бұрын
►► Learn how to teach your child from no words to sentences and beyond: www.agentsofspeech.com/course