Milieu Communication Training For Late Talkers
Milieu Communication Training For Late Talkers
Milieu Communication Training For Late Talkers
Abstract
Milieu communication training (MCT), an intervention designed to elicit early
communication and language behaviors in young children with a variety of
developmental disabilities, has a large empirical evidence base supporting its
efficacy. This article discusses components of MTC, as well as reviews research
supporting this intervention approach for children identified as late talkers.
Intervention for children with delayed language development—whether they
have general developmental delays, specific language delays, or autism spectrum
disorders—begins with the dilemma of how and where to start. Simply stated, if a
child is not talking, how do we help him to begin? Classic behavioral approaches to
early language intervention made use of imitation procedures and tangible rewards for
imitation, often beginning with motor and vocal imitation, and proceeding to verbal
imitation. Although these methods are effective for some children (e.g., Lovaas, 1987;
Tsiouri & Greer, 2003), they are not universally successful, particularly for children
with few imitation or vocal skills, or for children for whom the basic meaning of
communication, as a means to an end, has not yet been established. In addition, these
approaches run the risk of producing a very passive style of communication with little
generalization to functional use of language (Paul & Sutherland, 2005).
In response to this dilemma, behavioral theorists such as McGee, Morrier, and
Daly (1999), Rogers-Warren and Warren (1980), and Warren and Yoder (1998) began
to develop methods that drew on the strengths of behavioral programming: its
predictable, formal structure; use of task analysis; and attention to antecedents and
consequences of behavior. They attempted, however, to address the weaknesses with
which it is associated, including the need to establish basic communicative behavior
that supports the development of speech and to generalize communicative acts beyond
the training setting. These efforts paved the way for the development of the use of
natural environments and contingencies carefully engineered to elicit spontaneous
communicative acts that could be shaped toward more conventional, functional
language. These methods are known by a variety of labels, including incidental
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Components of MCT
The principles of MCT approaches include
• Training in everyday environments
• Arranging the environment to promote communication (e.g., putting
objects of interest in sight but out of reach)
• Offering preferred toys and activities so that participation is self-
reinforcing
• Building routines that the child enjoys
• Encouraging spontaneous communication by using “expectant waiting”
and refraining from prompting
• Waiting for the child to initiate teaching episodes by gesturing or
indicating interest in a desired object or activity
• Providing prompts and cues for expansion of the child's initiation
• Rewarding child responses with access to a desired object or activity
(intrinsic reinforcement), rather than a tangible reward unrelated to the
communication act (extrinsic reinforcement)
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