Word
Retrieval Strategies/Suggestions
Below is a list of strategies to
facilitate word retrieval skills. Suggestions are provided for both teachers
and parents.
·
Provide
ample time for the student to respond.
·
Use cuing strategies.
A cue is a "hint" or "clue" as to what the missing word
might be. The cues include the
following:
o
phonemic
cue/phonetic - this cue is providing the first sound of the word the student is
trying to retrieve. For example, if the student is thinking of the word
"vehicle" you might say, "ohh you're thinking of a word that
starts with a "vwvvvvvv...." (Make an extended /V/ sound).
o
semantic
cues - these cues are categories, background, associations, synonyms, antonyms,
functions. For example, for the word "vehicle" you might provide the
category name or features of the word: "This word is another word for
car", or "This is an object that you ride in, has wheels, has a horn,
people drive it to work, etc." Another
example, for the word "horse", you might say "It's a farm
animal". Background is what you know about the word/item. For example, if
you saw this item at a car show, you might say "remember the time we went
to a car show and I said the red corvette was a cool " (vehicle).
o
cloze
exercises - this cue involves saying a familiar phrase or a sentence and
leaving the last word out. For example, "We played a game of
"(Checkers, monopoly, etc.).
·
When the
child has a difficult time retrieving a word use the above cues. If you notice
the student is still struggling then provide choices or just tell the answer.
For example, "Is this a vehicle or an instrument?"
·
Avoid
interrupting or filling in a word. This could increase a child's frustration.
·
Use a slower
rate of speech. This encourages the child to speak slowly, which makes it
easier for him/her to retrieve words.
·
Encourage
your child to advocate for himself or herself. Instead of a child saying
"I don't know", the student could say, "I am having trouble
thinking of the word", "I need extra time to think". "Wait
I am thinking". "Could you help me?"
·
In the
classroom, provide word banks when possible, provide tests that incorporate
multiple choice questions, provide cue cards to use during tests, implement
take home exams, incorporate true/false statements on tests/quizzes.
by Sherri Shire-Susser
M.A. CCC/SLP