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Speech / Language

When a child struggles to be understood — or to understand — the frustration lives in the small moments all day long, for them and for you.

A speech or language impairment can be about sounds, fluency, or comprehension. Here's how the school evaluates it and what support follows.

Speech or Language Impairment (SLI)

A Speech or Language Impairment is a communication disorder, such as stuttering, trouble making sounds, or difficulty understanding or using words, that negatively affects a child's school performance.

What it means, in plain words

A Speech or Language Impairment (SLI) is a problem with communication that makes it hard for a student to learn, interact with others, or express their thoughts and needs. Communication is central to almost every school activity, from listening to the teacher to reading books and working with classmates. When a child has an SLI, they may struggle with the mechanics of speaking or with the rules of language itself.

Under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), SLI is one of the 13 specific disability categories that can make a child eligible for special education services. The federal definition describes it as 'a communication disorder, such as stuttering, impaired articulation, a language impairment, or a voice impairment, that adversely affects a child's educational performance' (34 C.F.R. §300.8(c)(11)). This means the communication problem must be significant enough to actively get in the way of learning.

SLI can be a child's primary disability or it can coexist with other disabilities. When communication issues accompany another condition like Autism or a Specific Learning Disability, speech-language therapy is typically provided as a related service to help the child benefit from their special education program.

What you might be seeing

Signs of a speech or language impairment can vary widely. A parent or teacher might notice that a child:

  • Has trouble making certain sounds correctly past a certain age (e.g., says 'wun' instead of 'run')
  • Stutters, repeating sounds, syllables, or words (e.g., 'b-b-b-ball')
  • Speaks with an unusual pitch, volume, or quality (e.g., their voice is always hoarse or very nasal)
  • Has a very small vocabulary for their age
  • Has difficulty following directions, especially if they are long or complex
  • Struggles to put words together to form a clear sentence
  • Has trouble understanding questions or participating in conversations
  • Finds it hard to tell a story in a way that makes sense
  • Is frequently misunderstood by peers and adults
  • Shows frequent self-correction or repetition when speaking

If you notice any of these indicators, consider seeking an evaluation from your school or a qualified professional.

How the decision actually gets made

For a child to be eligible for an IEP under this category, the school evaluation team must find two things. First, the child must have a communication disorder in one or more areas. Second, that disorder must negatively impact their education.

The evaluation must be conducted by a qualified professional, such as a certified and licensed Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP). The assessment should confirm that the speech or language disorder has a significant adverse effect on educational performance.

This means that simply having a lisp or a mild stutter is not enough to automatically qualify. The school team must gather data showing that the communication issue is preventing the child from making progress in the general education curriculum. For example, a severe articulation issue might make it difficult for a child to learn to read or for a teacher to understand their answers in class.

Things you're allowed to ask
  • What specific type of speech or language impairment does my child have?
  • Can you explain how this impairment is affecting their ability to learn in the classroom (e.g., reading, writing, participating in discussions)?
  • What specific skills will the speech-language pathologist (SLP) be working on?
  • How will speech therapy be delivered (e.g., one-on-one, in a small group, in the classroom)? How often and for how long?
  • How will you measure my child's progress toward their communication goals, and how will that progress be shared with me?
  • Is my child's SLI their primary disability, or is speech a related service for another eligibility category?
  • What can we do at home to support the skills my child is learning in therapy?
  • How will classroom teachers be involved in supporting my child's communication goals?
How to know it's working

Progress should be monitored regularly through goals set by the Individualized Education Program (IEP) team. Effective interventions should show improvements in communication skills, both in and out of school settings.

Signs that speech-language services are working include:

  • Increased participation in classroom activities and discussions
  • Better interactions with peers and adults
  • More confidence in communication situations
  • Improved academic performance in areas affected by communication
  • Progress toward specific IEP goals as measured by data collection
  • Reports from teachers that the child is easier to understand or is following directions more consistently

The Speech-Language Pathologist should provide regular progress reports and be available to discuss your child's development with you.

Types of speech and language impairments

Speech and language impairments are generally grouped into four main areas:

Articulation Disorder: This is a problem with making sounds. A child might substitute, leave out, add, or change sounds. For example, saying 'thoup' for 'soup'. Most children make these mistakes when they are young, but an articulation disorder is when these errors continue past the expected age.

Fluency Disorder: This is an interruption in the flow or rhythm of speech. The most common example is stuttering, which can include hesitations, repetitions, or prolonging sounds.

Voice Disorder: This involves problems with the pitch, loudness, or quality of the voice. The voice might sound hoarse, breathy, or nasal. It may also be too high, too low, too loud, or too soft. A medical doctor should rule out any physical cause for the voice problem.

Language Disorder: This involves problems with understanding or using language. It has two parts:

  • Receptive Language: Difficulty understanding what others are saying. A child may struggle with vocabulary, following directions, or grasping complex ideas.
  • Expressive Language: Difficulty expressing thoughts and ideas. A child may have a limited vocabulary, use incorrect grammar, or struggle to put sentences together.
What assessment should include

A comprehensive evaluation for a suspected SLI must be conducted by a certified and licensed Speech-Language Pathologist (SLP). It should be thorough and look at all aspects of the child's communication. Parents should expect the evaluation to include:

  • Review of Records:** Looking at school performance, past screenings, developmental history, and medical history.
  • Parent and Teacher Input:** Interviews or questionnaires about the child's communication at home and in the classroom.
  • Observation:** The SLP should watch the child in a natural setting, like the classroom or during recess, to see how they communicate with others.
  • Formal, Standardized Tests:** These tests compare your child's skills to other children of the same age in areas like vocabulary, grammar, and sound production.
  • Informal Assessments:** This might include analyzing a language sample (a recording of your child talking) or assessing their ability to tell a story.
  • Oral-Motor Exam:** A check of the physical structures (lips, tongue, jaw) to make sure they are working correctly for speech.
  • Hearing Screening:** To rule out hearing loss as a cause of the communication difficulties.

This full picture helps determine the presence of SLI and its impact on the child's educational experience.

Many families navigating this find a handful of supports come up again and again. None of these is automatic, and your child may need others entirely — but knowing the language helps you walk in prepared, not playing catch-up.

Supports often paired with Speech or Language Impairment

Speech therapy

Augmentative communication

Extended response time

Alternative response formats (oral, multiple-choice, project-based)

When a writing-heavy assignment isn't testing writing specifically, allow demonstration through speech, multiple choice, drawing, or project format.

SENTINEL·IEP keeps the full, cited list beside you — which supports fit your child's profile, the evidence to bring, and the pushback to expect — so the meeting never happens over your head.

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SENTINEL·IEP gives you knowledge, structure, and a companion in the room. It is not a law firm, and not a substitute for advice about your own child. For that, a special education attorney or your state's Parent Training and Information Center is the right call — and we'll always point you there when it matters.
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