Mickey's Minion
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jul 5, 2009
- Messages
- 1,014
Speak to her doctor and get their advice. My DD was the same way at 4. She went to part-time pre-school but she mumbled because my DH mumbles and he's the stay at home parent. Doctor said to wait until she started school full time and see how she was doing a few months in.
Her speech cleared almost immediately. She was evaluated by the school when she started, as were all children, and she was borderline. Next year she was re-evaluated and she passed with flying colors. She's 10 now and won't shut up! And no one has any problem understanding her.
Good luck with your DD and whatever you decide to do.
Waiting until school to be evaluated is terrible advice even if it comes from your pediatrician if others have expressed concerns about the child's speech. Pediatricians are not all knowing beings. They specialize in the body and illnesses. I love my pediatrician and he is an absolutely brilliant man and I trust his advice. However, with many developmental things it is often better to get an eval from somebody who specializes in that type of thing, ie; a speech and language professional. I would use my pediatrician to rule out any physical concerns for a speech issue and then get an eval by a speech and language professional.
The earlier the intervention, the easier it is for the child and the easier it is to correct abnormal speech patterns.
At age 3 and up, your school district is, by law, required to provide a free screening.
Having a screening now is free and easy and can't hurt anything. It is very likely they will send you on your way and tell you she is developmentally on target.
However, taking the "put head in sand and oh we will wait and see" approach could be very harmful. The older she gets the harder it is to correct.
So, why not just give the school a call and find out for sure? You are not out anything except a fun couple of hours for your child. That way you won't wonder and most importantly, if services are needed, you won't be kicking yourself later wondering why you didn't go earlier.