Welcome to 'l' blend practice! We believe that as a parent or caregiver, you are your child's best teacher
Welcome to 'l' blend practice! We believe that as a parent or caregiver, you are your child's best teacher and there are many things that you can do at home to improve your child's communication skills.
An 'l' blend is a combination of two consonant sounds. The second sound is the 'l' sound. Here are some examples:
fl: fly, flip, float
pl: plant, please, play
bl: blue, blink, black
cl: clean, clap, clue
gl: glue, glad, glass
sl: slow, sleep, slide
In the speech-language pathology world, we call those two-consonant-sound combinations 'consonant clusters'. Some children find it hard to make both sounds in the 'cluster' or blend so they leave out the 'l' sound. They might say 'pay' instead of 'play'. Some children might use a different sound such as 'w' instead of 'l'. They might say fwag instead of flag.
Developmental Norms:
There is a significant amount of variability for the development of blends however, most1 children produce all 'l-blends' correctly by 6 years of age.
1 Age at which at least 90% of children produced the sound correctly in all word positions.
(Adapted norms from The Goldman Fristoe Test of Articulation-2)
Give specific feedback! When the sound is produced correctly say: "That was a great 'l' sound" OR "I really heard your 'la' sound when you said 'blue'. Great job!"
When your child doesn't put the l' sound in the blend say: "Oops! You forgot the 'la' sound in 'blue'. " OR you could say: "That sounded like you said 'bue' instead of 'blue'. Remember to use your 'la' sound.
You can give the sound a fun name. For example, the 'l' sound could be called the "singing sound". Feel free to get creative and find a name for the sound that works best for your child!
How should I be practicing with my child?
A useful analogy is to compare working on speech sounds to playing a video game. In many video games, there are different levels that need to be completed or mastered in a sequence. The length of time a child stays on one level varies greatly from child to child, and can be impacted by a number of factors. These factors include:
If you feel that your child is not making progress as expected, please contact your school speech-language pathologist for more guidance in this area.
How to Master a Level?
For most 'levels', your child will be ready to move on once he or she is able to produce the sound at that level with 80% accuracy. You don't need to keep track of how your child is doing on each task unless you want to. You can simply estimate approximately how well your child is doing. If you have any questions, please feel free to contact your school's speech-language pathologist.
Reps: 1-2 Activities/Practice sessions per day
Duration: 5-15 minutes
Levels:
Think of practicing speech sounds as similar to exercising or lifting weights. If you start off by learning correct form, exercising every day, and gradually increasing the difficulty or weight, you will be able to make great progress towards your fitness goal! The same goes for working on speech sounds. We start by showing a child how to properly produce the sound. Then, we work with the child on saying the sound on its own (isolation), then in syllables (la, lee, lie, low, Lou). After that, we target the sound at the word level- beginning, end, middle, and in consonant blends. Gradually, we move to producing the sound at the sentence level, and then at the conversational level.
Researchers have found that shorter but more frequent practice sessions are more effective than longer but less frequent sessions. For this reason, I recommend that you try to sneak in as many short sessions as you can throughout your week. The more you practice, the faster your child will progress. A few 5-minute sessions a day is a great place to start, but you can always do fewer if it doesn't fit into your schedule. Try practicing while driving in the car, while standing in line, or while waiting for a doctor's appointment to get in a few extra repetitions.
A phonological process is a typical error pattern that young children use to simplify an adult speech sound they are not able to say. In the case of /l/ blends, the most common phonological process children exhibit is something called cluster reduction. Cluster reduction occurs when the child deletes one or more sounds from a cluster of consonant sounds. For example, a cluster reduction for the word "play" would be "pay". A cluster reduction for the word "class" would be "cass".
Cluster reduction is a common error pattern that babies and young children demonstrate when they are first learning to talk. It takes a while for them to learn to move their mouth to make two or three consonant sounds in quick succession to produce a consonant blend.
If cluster reduction continues past the age of 3 or 4, it may be something that your child needs a little help with. It is an error pattern that school SLPs work on frequently with children in kindergarten and grade one. Since children typically know how to make all the individual sounds in the blend correctly, it is often quite easy remediate their cluster reduction.
Tips for working on cluster reduction at home:
Be Specific: tell your children that they are leaving off one of the sounds at the beginning of words.
Give an Example: give your children examples of their errors (e.g. "You said boo when you meant to say blue. You left off the /l/sound").
Provide a Model: have your child look closely at your mouth as you slowly say the word that starts with the cluster reduction. Stretch out and emphasize the sound they are leaving off.
Blend the Sounds Smoothly: when you slow down words starting with /l/ blends for your child, it's easy to end up saying: buh – lue, puh – lay etc. That's okay if you need to do this initially to get that /l/ sound inserted after the initial consonant, but it is important to also work on a smooth transition between the first sound and the /l/ sound without adding an extra vowel into the word.