Post by Swamp Gas on Apr 22, 2007 21:43:21 GMT -5
www.thesun.co.uk/article/0%2C%2C2-2007180324%2C00.html
Parrot teaches boy of 4 to talk
By EMMA MORTON
April 20, 2007
AN autistic boy who could not speak has learned his first words — with the help of his family’s pet PARROT.
Dylan Hargreaves, four, has severe learning difficulties and had never uttered a single word.
But after listening to macaw Barney, he can now say “Night, night”, “Dad”, “Mum”, “Ta”, “Hello” and “Bye”.
And experts think he is close to his first two-syllable word.
Mum Michelle, 33, said: “Barney has changed our lives. Before he arrived, Dylan would try to speak, but the sound came out as a noise.
“Then we got Barney and, a few months later, Dylan began to talk. It was only the odd word, but I could clearly understand what he said.
“Every time I gave the bird something to say, Dylan started trying to say the same thing. I think it’s because the bird says things slower than me, which helps Dylan understand.
"Now when I put him to bed he says, ‘Night, night, mum’. It means the world to me.”
Michelle, of Blackburn, was given three-year-old Barney by partner Rob Hargreaves, 33, last January.
Delighted Rob said: “There is no doubt that Dylan copies the bird.”
Michelle reckons her son’s first two-syllable word will be Barney, because he loves his pet so much.
Speech therapist Dr Hazel Roddham of the University of Lancashire confirmed the value of learning to speak parrot-fashion.
She said: “If there’s some enjoyment, a child is more likely to learn. And presumably this parrot has attracted the boy’s attention.
“A child with learning difficulties might benefit from the bird’s slow repetition of words.”
Parrot teaches boy of 4 to talk
By EMMA MORTON
April 20, 2007
AN autistic boy who could not speak has learned his first words — with the help of his family’s pet PARROT.
Dylan Hargreaves, four, has severe learning difficulties and had never uttered a single word.
But after listening to macaw Barney, he can now say “Night, night”, “Dad”, “Mum”, “Ta”, “Hello” and “Bye”.
And experts think he is close to his first two-syllable word.
Mum Michelle, 33, said: “Barney has changed our lives. Before he arrived, Dylan would try to speak, but the sound came out as a noise.
“Then we got Barney and, a few months later, Dylan began to talk. It was only the odd word, but I could clearly understand what he said.
“Every time I gave the bird something to say, Dylan started trying to say the same thing. I think it’s because the bird says things slower than me, which helps Dylan understand.
"Now when I put him to bed he says, ‘Night, night, mum’. It means the world to me.”
Michelle, of Blackburn, was given three-year-old Barney by partner Rob Hargreaves, 33, last January.
Delighted Rob said: “There is no doubt that Dylan copies the bird.”
Michelle reckons her son’s first two-syllable word will be Barney, because he loves his pet so much.
Speech therapist Dr Hazel Roddham of the University of Lancashire confirmed the value of learning to speak parrot-fashion.
She said: “If there’s some enjoyment, a child is more likely to learn. And presumably this parrot has attracted the boy’s attention.
“A child with learning difficulties might benefit from the bird’s slow repetition of words.”