This week, I brought D in to be evaluated for his speech, or, shall I say, lack of intelligible speech.
While I have no worries about his intelligence or his physical ability (he can ride his sister’s Scootch like nobody’s business), I just wanted to know if D’s speech was in the realm of ‘normal’ for his age (2 years, 10 months, in case you are wondering). Most of his issues involve pronunciation and sticking to one-two word answers, instead of moving toward more complex sentences.
The speech therapist called us into her office. Immediately, I was struck by something I hadn’t expected. It was an accent. A very thick accent.
For the next hour, D was asked questions from a therapist with an obvious Indian accent. She was very smart, used perfect grammar and had an extensive vocabulary. There were also times she would ask D to do something, and he would not respond until I repeated it. There were times I wasn’t even sure what she was saying.
Right now, I’m afraid that some of you will think that I am being closed-minded or xenophobic, so let me remind you that my mother is Austrian and has a thick German accent. In no way do I limit her time with my kids for fear that she will ‘harm’ their grasp of the English language. And, yet, if I were to pick someone to help them learn proper pronunciation, she would not be my first choice, for reasons I’ve discussed before (oh, the scars from the porcupinis still sting).
What do you think? Do we have any professionals in the hiz–ouse to let me know if I should have cause for concern? Would D’s speech be improved in therapy, regardless of the therapist’s own speech?
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