Late Talkers: The Research Overview
Late talking is very common, as some children can catch up without addition help, previous advice suggested parents should ‘wait and see’ if children caught up on their own. Recent research suggest that approach is outdated, as children with persistent language need miss on out on early intervention services and affecting children’s school readiness. Studies found more boys are late talkers than girls and there is a genetic component, with late talking runs in families.
Outcomes of Early Language Delay
Dale, P. S., Price, T. S., Bishop, D. V. M., & Plomin, R.
2003
Vocabulary Of Toddlers Who Are Late Talkers
MacRoy-Higgins, M., Shafer, V. L. Fahey, K. J. and Kaden, E. R.
2016
Late Talkers: A Population-Based Study of Risk Factors and School Readiness Consequences
Hammer, S., Morgan, P., Farkas, G., Hillemeier, M., Bitetti, D., & Maczuga, S.
2017
Late Language Emergence in 24-month-old Twins: Heritable and Increased Risk for Late Language Emergence in Twins
Rice, M. L., Zubrick, S. R., Taylor, C. L., Gayán., Bontempo, D. E.
2014