Language Milestones

  • Birth

    Birth
    Riley was born without complications and carried to full term.
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    Infancy

    Infant language development has three criteria: form, content, and use.
    Form includes components of phonology, morphology, and syntax. They can be seen through vocalizations, true words, and phrases such as "Daddy" and "Daddy up".
    Content includes semantics. They can be seen through word reference to salient people and objects such as "mama" or "doggie."
    Use includes pragmatics. This is seen when a child listens, observes, and learns from others through social interactions.
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    0-3 months

    Form: Riley is starting to distinguish his own language from nonnative languages. He is also producing cooing and gooing sounds regularly.
    Content: He is inspecting two objects while he mouths some objects.
    Use: He is aware of strangers​ and unfamiliar situations.
  • First raspberry

    First raspberry
    Riley mimicked his mom's raspberries during play and interaction.
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    3-6 months

    Form: Riley is beginning to distinguish languages belonging to the same rhythmic class and producing vowel sounds.
    Content: He is distinguishing between purposeful and accidental actions.
    Use: Riley recognizes​ his own name when somebody says it and starts to fix his gaze on peoples faces.
  • First laugh/squeal

    First laugh/squeal
    During playtime with Dad, Riley squealed with glee.
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    6-9 months

    Form: Riley is now paying attention to fine phonetic detail and can distinguish between native and nonnative phonotactic patterns.
    Content: He starts to look in correct places for objects that are out of sights.
    Use: Riley is beginning to engage in intentional conversation.
  • First CV production

    First CV production
    Began to say "ba ba ba ba" in crib.
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    9-12 months

    Form: Riley no longer discriminates between two allophones of the same phoneme and is identifying words in the speech that do not conform to the native language stress patterns.
    Content: He is understanding rational actions as a means to a goal. He produces his first word and can understand around 5-10 words.
    Use: Riles utters first tue word and uses imperative pointing.
  • Noticable Diphthongs

    Noticable Diphthongs
    Diphthongs begin to emerge in vocal play.
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    Toddler

    While toddler language development still includes form, content, and use, they look very different from infancy. Form is where toddlers acquire and refine their phonemes as they witness it through adults. Content is where they begin to progress their language content from novice to expert word learners, as well as expanding their lexicons to be more receptive and expressive. Use is where they learn new language/discourse, functions, and conversational skills, by combining two or more words.
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    13-18 months

    Form: Riley begins to pronounce about 25% of his words with intelligibly. He starts to use negations and has an average MLU of 1.31.
    Content: He uses 3-20 words in his everyday speech.
    Use: Riley starts showing verbal turn-taking amongst​ peers.
  • First true word

    First true word
    First true word "Mama" is used with intent.
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    18-24 months

    Form: Riley processes spoken language and asks questions with appropriate intonation. He speaks with approximately 65% intelligibility.
    Content: He is integrating verbs and adjectives into spontaneous speech; his receptive vocabulary is larger than expressive.
    Use: Riley uses imaginative and informative language functions with two-gesture combinations.
  • One word expressiveness

    One word expressiveness
    Names familiar objects appropriately.
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    24-30 months

    Form: Riley is starting to show 65% intelligibly with all his words. He also begins using two-word combinations. He starts to mix in prepositions such as "in" and "on" He has an average of 1.92 MLU.
    Content: He is starting to comprehend about 500 words while producing around 200.
    Use: Riley starts using two-gesture combinations.
  • Two-three word utterances

    Two-three word utterances
    Utterances progress to two-three words of clear meaning such as "I want ball"
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    30-36 months

    Form: Most of Riley's phonological processes are suppressed and his intelligibility has increased to approximately 80%.
    Content: He asks simple questions and understands about 900 words with approximate production being 500 words.
    Use: He clarifies and asks for clarifications.
  • Asks questions, uses contractions

    Asks questions, uses contractions
    Asks for help, uses "can't" and "don't"
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    Preschool

    Preschool language development includes a higher sophistication of form, content, and use those previously experienced. Form is where preschoolers make improvements in speech productions, grammatical, derivational morphology, and sentence forms. Content is where they acquire skills by transitioning into an academic environment, and through storybook readings, they acquire new words. Use is where they improve their language with social interactions by using conversational skills and narratives.
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    3-4 years

    Form: Most of Riley's consonants are mastered; he is consistently using contractions and past tense.
    Content: He is beginning to narrow the possible meanings of new vocabulary using syntactic cues.
    Use: He is beginning to use primitive narratives, and he comprehends indirect requests with nonverbal pointing.
  • Formation of Sentences

    Formation of Sentences
    "Mommy is going to the store"
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    4-5 years

    Form: Riley has become very intelligible in connected speech; he uses irregular plurals consistently.
    Content: Riley's questions have evolved to include "what do, what does, what did."
    Use: He makes indirect requests and sequencing of events are used.
  • Beginning Literacy

    Beginning Literacy
    Riley is learning to read by the process of decoding.
    He reads "Goodnight Moon" with help from mom.