Lost for Words: Lost for Life? artwork

Lost for Words: Lost for Life?

5 episodes - English - Latest episode: about 13 years ago -

A conference on SLCN in older children and young people in June 2011. Co-hosted by the Department of Language and Communication Science, City University London, and the two main charities who support children and young people with SLCN: I Can and Afasic.

Medicine Health & Fitness city university city london conference slcn speech language communication afasic i-can
Homepage Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Overcast Castro Pocket Casts RSS feed

Episodes

Abby Beverly and Lavinia Scott

June 30, 2011 15:26 - 108 MB Video

Abby Beverly and Lavinia Scott gave a presentation at the Lost for Words: Lost for Life? conference in June 2011 called "My Speech and Me". Here you can watch some highlights from their funny and insightful presentation in which they talk about what it...

Victoria Joffe

June 30, 2011 11:18 - 498 MB Video

Dr Victoria Joffe is Reader in Developmental Speech, Language and Communication Impairments at the department of Language and Communication Science at City University London. Here you can watch highlights from her keynote address to the Lost for Words:...

Nicola Botting

June 30, 2011 09:20 - 532 MB Video

Dr Nicola Botting is Reader in Developmental Language Impairment at the department of Language and Communication Science at City University London. In this presentation given on Thursday 16 June at the Lost for Words: Lost for Life? conference, she dis...

Sarah Jayne Blakemore

June 30, 2011 08:45 - 505 MB Video

Professor Blakemore from University College London's Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience gives a fascinating presentation on her group's research into the social brain in adolescence. This presentation was given on Thursday 16 June 2011 at the Lost for...

Rt Hon John Bercow

June 29, 2011 14:25 - 245 MB Video

Rt Hon John Bercow is MP for Buckinghamshire and Speaker of the House of Commons. In 2008 he wrote the Bercow Review of Services for Children and Young People (0-19) with Speech, Language and Communication Needs which found wide-ranging inadequacies in...