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Cette unité d’enseignement s’inscrit dans le semestre 3 de la formation initiale des orthophonistes. Il s’agit d’une matière obligatoire qui a comme prérequis le cours de développement typique de la communication et du langage, le stage de première année et le cours de Troubles du langage oral : caractéristiques cliniques. Cette unité d’enseignement consiste en une initiation à l’évaluation du langage oral, à l’interprétation des résultats d’un bilan, et à la rédaction d’un rapport d’évaluation.
Temps présentiel : 15 heures
Charge de travail étudiant : 50 heures
Méthode(s) d'évaluation : Etude de cas, Travaux pratiques contrôlés
Référence : • • Cummings, Louise (2014). The Cambridge Handbook of Communication Disorders. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press
• Hulme, C & Snowling, MJ (2009). Developmental Disorders of Language Learning and Cognition. Somerset: Wiley
• Leonard, LB & Bishop, D (2000). Speech and Language Impairments in Children: Causes, Characteristics, Intervention and Outcome. Hove: Psychology
• Owens, RE (2015). Language development: an introduction. (9th ed). London: Pearson
• Sheridan M, Sharma, A & Cockerill, H (2008). From Birth to Five Years: Children’s Developmental Progress. (3rd ed). London: Routledge
• Hobart, C & Frankel, J (2004). A Practical Guide to Child Observation and Assessment. (3rd ed). Cheltenham: Nelson Thornes
• Fawcett, M & Watson, D (2016). Learning through child observation. (3rd ed). London: J Kingsley
• Pert, S & Stow, C (2019): Manual for Bilingual Assessment of Simple Sentences (BASS). www.rclst.org
• Botting, N (2005). Non-verbal Cognitive Development and Language Impairment. Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, 46 (3), 317-26
• Armon-Lotem, S., de Jong, J., & Meir, N. (2015). Assessing multilingual children: disentangling bilingualism from language impairment. Multilingual matters.
• Stein-Rubin, C., & Fabus, R. (2012). A guide to clinical assessment and professional report writing in speech-language pathology. Delmar.
• Bishop, DVM, Snowling, MJ, Thompson, PA, Greenhalgh, T & the CATALISE‐2 consortium (2017). Phase 2 of CATALISE: a multinational and multidisciplinary Delphi consensus study of problems with language development: Terminology. Journal of Child Psychology Psychiatry, 58: 1068-1080
• Cirrin, FM & Gillam, RB (2008). Language Intervention Practices for School-Age Children With Spoken Language Disorders: A Systematic Review. Language, Speech & Hearing Services in Schools, 39 (1), 110-137
• Norbury, CF, Bishop, DVM & Tomblin, JB (2008). Understanding Developmental Language Disorders. Hove: Taylor & Francis
• Reilly, S, Wake, M, Ukoumunne, OC, Bavin, E, Prior, M, Cini, E, Conway, L, Eadie, P & Bretherton, L (2010). Predicting Language Outcomes at 4 Years of Age: Findings from Early Language in Victoria Study. Pediatrics, 126 (6)
• Anthony, JL & Francis, DJ (2005). Development of Phonological Awareness. Current Directions in Psychological Science : A Journal of the American Psychological Society, 14 (5), 255-59
• Bernthal, JE, Bankson, NW & Flipsen P (2017). Articulation and Phonological Disorder: Speech Sound Disorders in Children. (8th ed). Boston: Pearson
• Dodd, B (2013). Differential Diagnosis and Treatment of Children with Speech Disorder. Chichester: John Wiley & Sons
• Stackhouse, J & Wells, B (1997). Children’s speech and literacy difficulties: a psycholinguistic framework. London: Whurr
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