Say that Again?! Green Eggs and Ham with a side of Apraxia
By Leslie Lindsay (image source: http://www.lacrosselibrary.org/index.asp) [This post previously ran over the summer. Here it is again in case you missed it.] I don’t know about you, but I love books. I love kids. And when one combines the love for children and literature, what often results is the abundance of words. And perhaps the proud moment of announcing, “Hey—she can read!” a year of two ahead of schedule. But not if you have a child with apraxia.* And so we read. As parents we read parenting books about late-talking children. We read about speech development and ways to stimulate our child. We read books to Kate. Simple board books by Dr. Seuss and Sandra Boynton that had the happy cadence of alliteration and rhyme. We pointed out illustrations in the book, “Oh, look-y here…can you see the birdie? Can you say bird?” We engaged in dialogic reading with our daughter, “What do think will happen next?” And nothing. Sure, she understood everything we said, even the hard words. We could tell because she would be …