Guest guest Posted April 17, 2001 Report Share Posted April 17, 2001 My Son Alec is 2.9 and actually his ST LOOOOOVES when I ask how she is working with Alec - why not ask her how you can incorporate these things she is doing at home and how it will help him (this will allow you to ask without hurting her feelings) - Alec's ST works with PECS with Alec (picture exchange) - She may be using " bingo " to get him to learn the word she is saying and the word to look at on the bingo card - or the letter - Since each child has different things they need to work on you should just ask how these games will help with his speech - Our therapist does exercises that don't seem like much talking to me either but what they do is actually strengthen the tongue so he can make the sound. They use foods as well and if you don't know how lolli-pops and licorice can help with speech then of course you would think they are just bribbing your child to talk which they aren't. There are many different " tricks " and exercises the therapist use - your son may respond better to certain games then others but please ASK how you can help at home - the therapists LOVE knowing the parents are interested and want to help. CA mom of Alec 7-26-98 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2001 Report Share Posted April 17, 2001 My son has been going to speech for the past year now. The first two ST used some games and activities. the second two sat him at a table and did a lot of repition. Today We went to Children's Specialized and had a speech eval done and the therapist spent two hours, with playdough, food and bowling,, and taught me how to do touch cues like she was doing with my son, it was the most cooperative I saw him be and kept his attention and cooperation the whole time. Ask the therapist for suggestions for at home, let her know you're trying to learn from her and she won't think you're doubting her ability. Lyn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 17, 2001 Report Share Posted April 17, 2001 Regarding the kids in speech tx and the activities they are doing: All those activities listed are harmless but to get to the work of treating the dyspraxia you NEED to incorporate oral-motor stimulation, oral exercises, and oral activities, big time. Examples include brushing, sucking, blowing, massaging, chewing, cold stimulation, vibrating stimulation, etc. This is what gets the kids producing speech. However, this alone will not cure language processing or articulation difficulty. But, it must be incorporated according to the needs of the child. Shari A. Gross Speech-language Pathologist Certified Elementary Educator 100 Craig Rd., Suite 104 Manalapan, NJ 07726 732-863-0080 Ganggross@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2001 Report Share Posted April 18, 2001 > My son (Zack, 2.8) has been in speech therapy for 7 months. My > question is this: for those of you who have children in speech > therapy, what exactly does your therapist do with your children? > Zack's therapist has been doing the same things with him since she > started, i.e. making puzzles, playing with play doh, a " bingo " game, > and I am not sure how this is supposed to help him speak. I don't > want to ask her because I don't want to hurt her feelings and make > her think that she is not doing a good job. She is trained in the > field, I just don't understand how these types of " games " are > supposed to help him speak. Let me have your thoughts. Thank you > and God bless. > PS: He has been on ProEFA for one week - no change yet! Hi I thought I put in my 2 cents worth, my son has been in speech for 3 months he is 23 months old. and also using PROEFA which has been a help with his speech as well as cognitively and attention span staying more focus. Regarding Speech therapy our SLP is using the association method he has picture cards and she may lay down a picture of a ball and a cup and she will ask him to give her the ball. He has to determine which picture is the ball. Also she uses letter sounds like H, A, D, M I and she has cards for them and she will say the sound and he will point to it. Then she said now you say M(sound) mmmmmm it he won't say it she will say touch MMMMM the letter M and he will then she will try to get him to say MMM. ect.. often by repetition. That's what we are doing would like to hear from others too. Becky in Ks Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2001 Report Share Posted April 18, 2001 If you don't have a clear idea of the current therapy " goal " , even if that involves working on ONE speech element ( words starting with " B " , or final " P " pop, soap, drip, etc) than something is wrong. Go ahead and ask! Therapists need us to be involved, and so do our kids. Aimless motor exercises without some sound production behind it- preferably SPECIFIC sound production, is not useful. A therapist needs to be demanding " use your voice! " , as well as understanding and tolerant of any attempt. High expectations, praise for any attempt. If you are unclear about the therapist's " plan " , it may be time to shop for someone else. Talk, ask, be annoyingly inquisitive. Your child needs your message " I am fighting for you! And I know you CAN do it! " ... Good luck. Cowles Moir jecowles@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2001 Report Share Posted April 18, 2001 Shari, The SLP that I work for, I'm an SLP assistant, is looking for more great and wonderful tx ideas for an 11 year old child who has not been in a " regular " school system. Any ideas would be welcome. Idona Cannaday-Kleinbeck Re: [ ] Re: Speech Therapy Regarding the kids in speech tx and the activities they are doing: All those activities listed are harmless but to get to the work of treating the dyspraxia you NEED to incorporate oral-motor stimulation, oral exercises, and oral activities, big time. Examples include brushing, sucking, blowing, massaging, chewing, cold stimulation, vibrating stimulation, etc. This is what gets the kids producing speech. However, this alone will not cure language processing or articulation difficulty. But, it must be incorporated according to the needs of the child. Shari A. Gross Speech-language Pathologist Certified Elementary Educator 100 Craig Rd., Suite 104 Manalapan, NJ 07726 732-863-0080 Ganggross@... Like information but not emails? Choose the option of " no emails web only " to read, respond to, or post messages directly from the website. For all the emails sent in one choose " digest. " URL to the home page to change options/or to search the archives: Post message: List owner: -owner For more information: http://www.apraxia.cc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 18, 2001 Report Share Posted April 18, 2001 In a message dated 04/18/2001 1:37:03 PM Eastern Daylight Time, idonac@... writes: > Shari, The SLP that I work for, I'm an SLP assistant, is looking for more > great and wonderful tx ideas for an 11 year old child who has not been in a > " regular " school system. Any ideas would be welcome. Idona > Cannaday-Kleinbeck Tell me about the child. Shari Gross Speech-Lang. Pathologist Certified Elementary Educator Manalapan, NJ 732-863-0080 gangross@... > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 21, 2001 Report Share Posted April 21, 2001 Hi My son has been in speech therapy for almost 1 year and his theapist does the same routine as yours. It seems like play therapy and I did not feel he was getting " enough " from it. Now he was assigned a 2nd therapist and she is totally different. She specializes with oral motor problems and created a program for him. He has a book and they sit and do each sound multiple times, ah, a, e, eh etc......ofcourse he cannot say all the sounds but he tries. I feel this therapy has shown much better progress and it is only 1 month. He was able to say mmmmm and eee but was unable to put them together to say me. 3 sessions with this therapy and he is saying me. They also read wheres spot, every week and he says NO SPOT as best he can. I feel the play therapy is not as effective as this other type he is getting. Hope some of this was helpfu lisa Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 22, 2001 Report Share Posted April 22, 2001 Hi , When you speak of " play therapy " we are not talking about speech therapy for older children or teenagers-we are talking about speech (or any kind of therapy) for a preschooler. Tanner's therapist who is awesome uses oral motor-PROMPT-Kaufman techniques-etc. but she does all of it using fun stuff-toys, etc. for rewards-encouragement, etc. which is what I call " play therapy " Tanner has no clue what oral motor therapy is-or any of the rest of it if you asked him-but is that what they do with him? YES!! Tanner's therapist once said something very brilliant to me-she said that a child with apraxia has a long road ahead of them, and you don't want to burn them out by 4 years old so that they hate therapy. Tanner is 4 years 10 months and has been in intensive speech therapy (and OT, etc.) since he was 2 and a half!! " Play therapy " is just a way to facilitate toys to get the child to participate in the therapy. It's talking the language of the typical child on their level. It's not that Speech Pathologists depend solely on it-but it is something that can be incorporated into what you want the child to do. You can also as a parent have constructive play time that will encourage language development. (puppets, etc) It may not have been the " play therapy " that didn't work for your child-it may have been the therapist. Then again, statistically the majority of preschoolers respond to play, or toys-that doesn't mean all. Perhaps you have a unique child, and you were perceptive enough to be aware that a change was needed. No one person is always right for everyone, but as you know everyone's got opinions. That's OK, but just remember that whatever worked for your child is the right way for your child-maybe not for all the rest. For example-Tanner did NOT respond to a therapist that didn't incorporate play therapy into the therapy. The important thing for all of us as parents is to find out what you already found out-what works for YOUR child! And that's great! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 22, 2001 Report Share Posted April 22, 2001 Hi , Thank you for your e-mail so quick answered. I haven't got the tape yet. But i think i will be receiving this week when you have the address correct written. Is the tape with an instruction to parents and speech therapists to treath children with dyspraxia? It would be very nice to have it!!! It would be nice if you have contact with Kaufman about my son. But what the problem is that my son don't understands english. We speak Dutch at home. If nobody in Holland can help my son not with the instruction on the tape too then we come over. We have family in Seattle, perhaps that is an option we can bring with you. Have a fine sunday! Here in Holland the sun is shining and the children are playing outside. What a nice feeling, winter is over. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 23, 2001 Report Share Posted April 23, 2001 " Here in Holland the sun is shining and the children are playing outside. What a nice feeling, winter is over....But what the problem is that my son don't understands english. We speak Dutch at home. If nobody in Holland can help my son not with the instruction on the tape too then we come over. " Hi ! Mustafa who is one of CHERAB's outreach coordinators found the following information that may help-and I know that you and Kaufman MA CCC-SLP (Hi !) have been emailing each other back and forth, so I'm sure something will come through soon that will really help. As far as " the sun is shining and the children are playing outside... " It's been awesome here too (finally) I think even all the adults want to play outside here! Talk to you soon (and let us know when you receive the Inside Edition TV segment!) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 24, 2001 Report Share Posted April 24, 2001 Just a note from a speech therapist: A good therapist does both " play therapy " and work! It is sometimes difficult to do, but is the best approach to keep language meaningful and speech sounds practiced. Coleen- SLP Georgia > My son has been in speech therapy for almost 1 year and his theapist does the > same routine as yours. It seems like play therapy and I did not feel he was > getting " enough " from it. Now he was assigned a 2nd therapist and she is > totally different. She specializes with oral motor problems and created a > program for him. He has a book and they sit and do each sound multiple times, > ah, a, e, eh etc......ofcourse he cannot say all the sounds but he tries. I > feel this therapy has shown much better progress and it is only 1 month. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 25, 2001 Report Share Posted April 25, 2001 From: " Hannah Bowyer " <rhbowyer@...> Date: Tue Apr 24, 2001 7:06pm Subject: Re: [ ] Speech Therapy Coleen, where in Georgia are you a speech therapist? We are in NE suburb Atlanta area. I think our ST is doing pretty good although it is mostly play and we haven't seen any results in the past 6 mths. I found out this week that she had listed my daughter as having apraxia but had never told me until I found this group and mentioned it to her last week. Then to my surprise she said " oh yeah, I have her listed as having that " . I was disappointed in the fact that she didn't bother telling me when I could have had all this support sooner and started on the ProEFA sooner. Hannah, Atlanta, GA - mom of LeAnne (31mths) >Just a note from a speech therapist: A good therapist does >both " play therapy " and work! It is sometimes difficult to do, but is the best >approach to keep language meaningful and speech sounds practiced. > >Coleen- SLP Georgia > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2001 Report Share Posted July 27, 2001 To all the parents who are confused or in disagreement with their children's therapist's approach, I would suggest speaking with that therapist and voicing your concerns as honestly as you would on this list. As a therapist, I would welcome those comments. When I do my private practice, I make it a rule to have the parents sit in on the sessions so they can see what I do and carry out the goals with better clarity than they could if I were to give them directions after a session. I spend as much time, some sessions, explaining things to parents as I do therapy and, in the long run, this makes the therapy more effective. See if the therapist would be amenable to have you sit in on some sessions. Just my 2 cents Jeff Korn SLP, NY http://expage.com/speech4all Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2001 Report Share Posted July 27, 2001 Debbie- I feel your pain. My son is 4 and been in speech therapy since he was 2. He is bored out of his mind. He has been doing the same sounds for a year now and his therapist even bores me. She says work is not suppose to be fun. Well try to tell that to a 4 year old boy. We go twice a week and it's a battle everytime. I'll be thrilled to death when he can finally give up speech therapy and so will he. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 27, 2001 Report Share Posted July 27, 2001 hi , this seems to be pretty common... there should be more special trained speech therapist.. all of kaufman,s tapes even says these children in a different way.. much more slower... i dread every Friday when that girl comes to my house, the same toys, the same plastic frogs!..his early intervention will be up in Nov... then we see what the school will provide... i started telling his pre-school{will start a new one next monday}...TEACHER THAT THEY HAVE TO HAVE SOMEONE THAT DOES SIGN LANGUAGE..because he is more shy and quiet in public..he will sign some words if nothing else.. i feel so much time is being wasted..what state are you in??/....DEBBIE Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2001 Report Share Posted July 28, 2001 Just to comment. Our Therapist wants one of us in the room. She feels it makes Graham more comfortable and therefore they get more done. > To all the parents who are confused or in disagreement with their children's > therapist's approach, I would suggest speaking with that therapist and > voicing your concerns as honestly as you would on this list. As a therapist, > I would welcome those comments. When I do my private practice, I make it a > rule to have the parents sit in on the sessions so they can see what I do and > carry out the goals with better clarity than they could if I were to give > them directions after a session. I spend as much time, some sessions, > explaining things to parents as I do therapy and, in the long run, this makes > the therapy more effective. See if the therapist would be amenable to have > you sit in on some sessions. Just my 2 cents > > Jeff Korn > SLP, NY > http://expage.com/speech4all > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2001 Report Share Posted July 28, 2001 I would suggest seeing a different therapist. Someone that will be exciting to your child. Maybe you will see faster results with a new person and new way of doing things. Just a suggestion Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 28, 2001 Report Share Posted July 28, 2001 , I'm not a speech professional but it seems to me that young children learn best when they are having fun. Probably 50% of my almost 5 year old son's SP sessions center around play and verbalizing about play. He works VERY hard and is completely fried by the end of the session bit also has a great deal of fun. Kurt was dx'd with apraxia just about 2 years ago and has been in SP for about 20 months. He has progressed from completely non verbal to conversational, if not always understandable. If your child is bored during therapy and not progressing it might be time to have a conversation with your SLP or look for a new one. Remember, even if it makes you uncomfortable to challenge a professional, if you're not your child's advocate no one else will be either. Good luck and keep working, Doug Debbie- I feel your pain. My son is 4 and been in speech therapy since he was 2. He is bored out of his mind. He has been doing the same sounds for a year now and his therapist even bores me. She says work is not suppose to be fun. Well try to tell that to a 4 year old boy. We go twice a week and it's a battle everytime. I'll be thrilled to death when he can finally give up speech therapy and so will he. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 31, 2001 Report Share Posted July 31, 2001 Hello - We have twin boys and they see different private speech therapist. We do not stay in the room, we tried that and they would not listen to the therapist at all. But after a month they go into their room fine, without a fuss. BUT the problem is one of the therapist is very good and really prompts and gets one talking and pronouncing the words great and the other therapist is a push over and my son tells her what he wants and she isn't that strict with him and after a year he is the one that is not talking so great and still yells if he doesn't say the word correctly. I saw this problem way in the beginning and tried to address this but the therapist are good friends and they back each one up and it was a dead end issue so for now I am trying to work with the one that needs catching up.....Never a dull day!!! Joya111@... Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2001 Report Share Posted September 14, 2001 Michele - This is all personal decisions. Here in America there is Early Intervention which ran by each individual state, which gives services to children ages birth to three. On the child's third birthday they begin getting services through the Public School System - which is run by each County within the state. Confusing huh??!! The quality and quantity of services a child receives this way depends on the child, the state and the circumstances - and sometimes luck. I know people who are getting EXCELLEN services, but I also know of others who are fighting and fighting and not getting what their child so desperatly needs. Private therapy is always an option, but quite expensive too. Not all insurance companies cover this - as most do not. I fought the insurance company for almost 2 years and eventually lost. I appealed and appealed, had letters from every Dr. imaginable (neurologists, Dev. Ped. etc...) saying this was a neurological condition and speech therapy was ESSENTIAL - it didn't matter. Now that my son just started preschool (he is 4) he is getting therapy through our county and Public School system and I am very pleased. If you are pleased with your child's progression, his therpist, and the quantity and quality of therapy he is receiving through special education - then leave him. You are not guaranteed to get better services if you go private - it is all about the Therpist him/herself. I hope this helps a little!! Let me know if I can do anything else - i will do anything to help!! Carnell North Carolina www.verbaldyspraxia.com CHERAB Outreach Coordinator [ ] Speech Therapy Hi, Is the speech therapy in the states done through specialist education service or is it private? If it is private is it covered by health insurance? I have made contact with a person here in New Zealand and she has told me that I should stick with the special education service as they offer the best service. I am so confused I don't know what to do. Help!!!! Private and pay. Or public and get stuff all help!!! Michele Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 28, 2002 Report Share Posted October 28, 2002 Does anyone whose child is on the protocol have a speech therapist who would be willing to consult with a speech therapist who is working with one of my kids who is also on the protocol? Thanks in advance. Kathy -NNY Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 18, 2003 Report Share Posted September 18, 2003 Hi, I had an independent oral motor speech evaluation done with my son so we would know what we need to work on. He has low muscle tone in his face, he has some incorrect placement of his tongue and lip closure, his breathe support needs help. And he can do words and sounds in isolation but they usually loose intelligibility when you put words together--he just can't do it (motor planning prob, globally praxic) So, knowing this, we have incorporated 3 specific programs to help that get run every teaching session. To address the low muscle tone, we have a whistle program. We bought the whistle hierarchy set from Sara Rosenfeld- Talk Tools catalog (innovative therapy international ITI website: http://shop.azstarnet.com/cgi-bin/iti.storefront/3f698c910179a098271ea9c53672073\ 1/Catalog/1016 Each whistle has a specific purpose and he has to blow one for one second a total of 25 times in a row before it is mastered and we move onto the next in the hierarchy. We also use bite sticks. We place the bite stick on the left side, he bites down and you gently pull on it while he's biting...the goal is 15 seconds. We alternate left and right sides 10 times each side. We are also now using the Kaufman praxic Kit for echoic training. Learned about it briefly first at Dr. Carbone's #1 workshop and got even more info at his #2 workshop and we've decided to try it. I really really REALLY like using the Kaufman Kit... http://www.kidspeech.com/ksp.html It's been almost 2 weeks now since we started it, he had about 4 out of 10 we needed to target in the CVCV pattern (tweet tweet, neigh neigh, peep peep etc), now he has 1 left. Once that is mastered and he can do all 10 fluently with all 4 teachers, we will move to the next section. Also, one of my ABA teachers is an SLP so she helps to keep us all consistent and on track with ideas and materials and making sure we are doing things correctly, I'm very lucky to have her on the team. I think it is really amazing how speech therapists can hear things we don't. Ex, my son says chipa when he wants a chip, the SLP pointed out he's not saying chipa he's saying tipuh...she was right. good luck, Jennica [ ] Speech Therapy Dear List, Does anyone know what materials to use to do " speech therapy " at home? I want to incorporate that into my son's program but not sure what to get. Thank you, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted April 30, 2005 Report Share Posted April 30, 2005 only get speech 1x per week now. > I just want to say Thanks to Speechville Speech and their wonderful > resources. I was able to get our insurance company to cover for > speech therapy for my son. I asked for a referral and was denied > based on their reasoning that he should be getting it at school. > After having to do some researching, I found your sites and got some > excerps from different doctors and incorporated into my letter. It > took 25 days, they came back with an approval. I am so estatic, > words cannot discribe how happy I am that my son is given this > opportunity to get more speech. > > My son is 6 years old and is diagnosed with PDD-NOS, asphasia and > complex partial seizures. He has a photographic memory, and has no > mental retardation. The only thing that is holding him back is his > speech. His school gives him only 3 days of speech therapy at 25 > minutes per day, one day of one on one, and 2 days with a small > group. I have been struggling with the school to give him more > speech therapy and has been told that he is getting more than most > and that is all they can give him. > > My frustration for these 3 years has lead me to seek outside help. I > hit a dead end with my insurance until I found your site. Thank you > Speech Ville. I just want to let other parents know that you to can > get the help your child need, just don't give up! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 17, 2005 Report Share Posted September 17, 2005 hi lori, i'd base the opinion on your son. if he is having issues with 2 different teachers then see if they can get him with one. to be honest I think having 2 is good. 2 heads are better then one, and they each can work on their own strengths and the each hopefully covering each others weaknesses. also he's older now and probably can tolerate a afternoon speech. lor, you know your child of course so if you feel that things have to tweeked than speak to the therapist. but i would give it time and see. chris lorijla <lorijla@...> wrote: Could use some insight here. My son who is in a self contained 1st grade class, dx with severe verbal apraxia and is to get speech therapy 5x's week as well as other therapies. School started 9/7, yesterday (9/15)I received 2 seperate notes from two different ST about his therapy. One ST is doing 2x's and one ST 3x's. Only one of the ST notes indicated the times on it: one day am one day PM. Further, I was very distaisfied with his ST last year and sent a formal request to have him switched to a new ST in what I perceived to be a tactful letter. Although we are not a big district there are other FT ST. (cant help but feel this was in some way retialiation because of my request) Too add, his classroom has k and 1st graders (only 2 first graders). The k are only in the class in am. So of course it makes sense all pull outs would be in the am. I know that it is in the best interest for my child to have ST by the same person - and in the am session. I immediately placed calls to the school and waiting to hear. But understand the schedule and could deal with some days am some pm. I did first contact one of the ST and she assured me that she is working closely with the other ST, blah blah. Based on my brief information - could use some thoughts/advice. Also, if someone wants to I can be contacted privately. P.S. My side concern is how much therapy he has already missed - it feels wrong. Thanks to a wonderful group. Lori J. Mother to age 6 severe verbal apraxia. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.