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| Wednesday, October 14, 1998 Published at 12:20 GMT 13:20 UKHealth Boosting baby's IQ? It's all talk ![]() Nine of the 70 children given therapy are now said to be 'gifted'
The way parents communicate with their children during the first year can have a far-reaching effect on both their language skills and intelligence, it has been claimed. Speech and language therapist Dr Sally Ward, from the Speech, Language and Hearing Centre in London, has spent the last seven years investigating language development in babies and children.
IQ tests Dr Ward's claims are based on a study of 140 nine-month-old babies. Half the parents were given advice on how best to talk to their babies, and the other half were left to their own devices.
Dr Ward said: "The language skills of the intervention group were very significantly higher than the others. "There was also an enormous difference in the general intelligence of the children in the intervention group, compared to the other children. "And the average intelligence of the intervention group was a year and three months ahead of the other group." Speech therapy programme Dr Ward has developed a speech therapy programme, known as Wilstar, to put her theories into practice.
Such was its success, children are still being offered the programme and many NHS therapists pay to be trained in the system. Speech therapists visit the family for four months when the child is at a critical pre-language stage and show parents how to best develop speech skills. Denise Ditchfield, of the Mancunian Community Trust, said: "A short period of time, working alongside the parents, building on their skills, has enabled us to bring that child or even take the child above what they would normally be achieving at 13 or 15 months." Advice to parents Dr Ward recommends the following advice to parents:
Experts have praised the way the Wilstar project improves children's language skills, but say claims that it improves intelligence itself, should be treated with extreme caution. Dr James Law, a leading expert on speech therapy based at City University, London, said: "I'm wary of strong claims about improving intelligence - I'm reasonably happy with claims about improving language, speech and language - because speech and language don't necessarily correspond exactly to intelligence." Scientific procedures Experts say it is extremely difficult to measure intelligence in toddlers, and the methods Dr Ward chose to use have provoked doubts - children were not randomly assigned as in any normal scientific project.
"Well, that may be the case, but it raises questions about how valid the results are." James Birchinough was one of the original Wilstar babies. His IQ was tested last year, but his mother says he's perfectly ordinary - and has not turned into an egg head. "He did fairly well on that test. But he's just an ordinary happy little boy," she said. | Health Contents
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