Transcript Slide 1

Juvenile and young offenders:
speech, language &
communication needs
Professor Karen Bryan
Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences,
University of Surrey.
Successful feasibility study of SLT for
young people in prisons:
• Two year project funded by the Helen Hamlyn
Trust in partnership with the Prison Service.
– Set up and evaluated a speech and language
therapy (SLT) service in each establishment.
– Collected data on speech, language and
communication needs.
– Established that SLT could make a very
positive contribution to the regimes.
• Issues:
– Security
– Noise
– Regimes that vary for across establishments
– A language of their own
– A culture that can be alien
– A ‘rule’ culture and vast amounts of written
information
– Most interventions to address offending
behaviour are verbally mediated.
Sample of juveniles
• Sample of 58 participants (half of an
establishment).
• Mean age was 17 (15.2-18.1).
• 2 had ESL (lower than expected).
• 90% left school before 16 and of these 18%
were not attending at age 12 or younger.
• Entry level literacy: 62% did not reach level one
for literacy, 60% did not reach level one for
numeracy.
Language levels on
TOAL-3
• 46%-67% of the juveniles are in the poor
or very poor category.
• A further 20-33% are below average for
their age.
• See Bryan et al (2007)
Why are levels of speech,
language and communication
difficulty high?
• Association between speech and language disorders
and behaviour difficulties is well established (Humber
and Snow 2001).
• Difficulties in understanding make children very
vulnerable in relation to education (Hooper et al 2003).
• Low education and speech and literacy difficulties are
risk factors for offending (Tomblin 2000).
• Over-representation of hearing impaired, learning
difficulty, mental health problems within the prisoner
population.
• Where developmental difficulties have not been
addressed, these contribute to the cycle of
disadvantage (RCSLT 07).
SLT within the regimes
• Referrals included a range of communication
difficulties.
• SLT focus on enabling the young person with
communication difficulties to engage in the
prison regime.
• Access to other inputs eg education by
making information accessible, and
innovative developments eg a parenting
group and SLT training provided for Learning
Support Assistants.
• SLT bridges education and health.
Evidence Base
• We have a very strong evidence base for
speech and language therapy in relation to
both developmental and acquired speech
and language difficulties.
• The recent ICAN report on Social Inclusion
also provides an evidence base for speech
and language therapy in relation to
preventing and addressing social
inclusion.
Criminal Justice system
• Not just young people who are ‘inside’
• Need to consider:
– School non-attenders and excluded children
– Adults with pervasive developmental
problems
– Children with non-standard educational
backgrounds eg ‘looked after’, traveller
children
– Children known to post offending and offender
prevention services eg probation and YOT
teams.
Summary
• There is a need for SLT and we can
demonstrate that SLT works- we have an
evidence base and a theoretical model.
• Demonstrating a contribution to the wider
service/regime has been achieved.
• We need to develop a national model for
SLT provision.
• Bryan K, Freer J and Furlong C. (2007) Language and
communication difficulties in juvenile offenders. International
Journal of Language and Communication Disorders, 42, 505520.
• Bryan, K. (2004). Prevalence of speech and language difficulties
in young offenders. International Journal of Language and
Communication Disorders, 39, 391-400.
• Hooper S J, Roberts J E, Zeisel SA, and Poe M. (2003). Core
language predictors of behavioural functioning in early
elementary school children: Concurrent and longitudinal findings.
Behavioral Disorders, 29(1): 10-21.
• Humber E, and Snow PC. (2001). The language processing and
production skills of juvenile offenders: A pilot investigation.
Psychiatry, Psychology and Law 8, 1-11.
• ICAN (2007) language and Social Exclusion.
• RCSLT (2007) Speaking Out: young offenders with
communication difficulties. London: RCSLT.