Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 If you can get private evaluations from a developmental pediatrician, or SLP, or OT, or neurologist stating that treatment plan should include individual therapy you may not have any support to warrant this individual ST and continued OT. Ask for a medical and educational plan from each of the above professionals. IT will be your ammunition to get placement and services. Good Luck! Joanne [ ] School district philosophy that 1:1 individualST not warranted or necessary in age 3-5 years We just recently had a transition meeting with our local school district. Although nothing will be official until the IEP in late August/early September, I got a good idea of what would be offered. Likely placement will be in the only Special Ed language group for located 45-60 minutes from my home - (unless I quick my job to provide transportation, ph would have to take a school bus - and spend as much time on the bus as he would in class. Plus with his dyspraxia I would be worried about him falling on the bus stairs). He has no other special ed issues, outside a severe expressive language delay, low tone and mild sensory integration dysfunction - dramatically better after months of OT). This seems inappropriate to place him in a group of special ed kids when the literature for apraxia states that group therapy doesn't even work. I think he should remain in a regular preschool, and get individual ST and continued OT. I was told that the SLPs there have a " philosophy " that individual speech therapy is not necessary, warranted or helpful for age 3-5 years, and that they only offer group therapy.which " should be just fine " for my son. If he regressed over 6 months the issue could be raised again. Everything I have read on childhood apraxia of speech reinforces that group therapy does not work in this neurological condition, that these children need to be approached differently than other communication disorders and that early, frequent and intensive 1:1 speech therapy sessions together with OT to address global motor planning is what is necessary. Outside of printing out and collecting all the info I can on appropriate therapy for apraxia, I'm not sure what else to do. With the NIH statement below, how can they " not believe in individual ST " ??? I know its all about money that the school doesn't have, but this is not appropriate education for my globally apraxic child! - The National Institute on Deafness and Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health " Children with developmental apraxia of speech will not outgrow the problem on their own. " " People with apraxia of speech usually need frequent and intensive one-on-one therapy " (NIDCD/NIH, Accessed 11/19/2004) http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/voice/apraxia.asp Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 17, 2006 Report Share Posted May 17, 2006 , Gather all the info you can, the more studies and actual science the better. The decision by the supreme court last fall said that the burden of proof lies with the families. So it is up to us to research the issues and present it to the schools. Other than studies, it will be good to show them what other school districts (public) are doing - obviously, you want to show them examples where the kids get tons of services! After that? Hire and advocate or lawyer. To me that is where it gets sticky. Is it cheaper to just go private for services or hire an advocate/lawyer and fight? I am facing that dilemma right now myself. Hopefully the schools will come through for my son. Martha ps - do you follow the apraxia-kids listserv? There has been some talk about this exact stuff (burden of proof) recently. Joanne Mulholland <mulholland34@...> wrote: If you can get private evaluations from a developmental pediatrician, or SLP, or OT, or neurologist stating that treatment plan should include individual therapy you may not have any support to warrant this individual ST and continued OT. Ask for a medical and educational plan from each of the above professionals. IT will be your ammunition to get placement and services. Good Luck! Joanne [ ] School district philosophy that 1:1 individualST not warranted or necessary in age 3-5 years We just recently had a transition meeting with our local school district. Although nothing will be official until the IEP in late August/early September, I got a good idea of what would be offered. Likely placement will be in the only Special Ed language group for located 45-60 minutes from my home - (unless I quick my job to provide transportation, ph would have to take a school bus - and spend as much time on the bus as he would in class. Plus with his dyspraxia I would be worried about him falling on the bus stairs). He has no other special ed issues, outside a severe expressive language delay, low tone and mild sensory integration dysfunction - dramatically better after months of OT). This seems inappropriate to place him in a group of special ed kids when the literature for apraxia states that group therapy doesn't even work. I think he should remain in a regular preschool, and get individual ST and continued OT. I was told that the SLPs there have a " philosophy " that individual speech therapy is not necessary, warranted or helpful for age 3-5 years, and that they only offer group therapy.which " should be just fine " for my son. If he regressed over 6 months the issue could be raised again. Everything I have read on childhood apraxia of speech reinforces that group therapy does not work in this neurological condition, that these children need to be approached differently than other communication disorders and that early, frequent and intensive 1:1 speech therapy sessions together with OT to address global motor planning is what is necessary. Outside of printing out and collecting all the info I can on appropriate therapy for apraxia, I'm not sure what else to do. With the NIH statement below, how can they " not believe in individual ST " ??? I know its all about money that the school doesn't have, but this is not appropriate education for my globally apraxic child! - The National Institute on Deafness and Communication Disorders, National Institutes of Health " Children with developmental apraxia of speech will not outgrow the problem on their own. " " People with apraxia of speech usually need frequent and intensive one-on-one therapy " (NIDCD/NIH, Accessed 11/19/2004) http://www.nidcd.nih.gov/health/voice/apraxia.asp Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 18, 2006 Report Share Posted May 18, 2006 Thanks for the advice. Actually I pulled off 5 pages of quotes recommending intensive, frequent 1:1 ST, and warnings of regression when therapy is stopped from the apraxia-kids website, including NIH recommendations, those from Mayo clinic and other experts on apraxia. I just don't understand how a school district can say " its not their philosophy " when the NIH has come of with recommendations. I would be embracing a communication-based school providing group therapy if it were therapy that would help my apraxic child. But it won't. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 29, 2006 Report Share Posted May 29, 2006 Do you have those copies? I would love to show them to the public school my twins attend? let me know what to do. Thanks so much. (Faeth) Apraxic twins <claudiamorris@...> wrote: Thanks for the advice. Actually I pulled off 5 pages of quotes recommending intensive, frequent 1:1 ST, and warnings of regression when therapy is stopped from the apraxia-kids website, including NIH recommendations, those from Mayo clinic and other experts on apraxia. I just don't understand how a school district can say " its not their philosophy " when the NIH has come of with recommendations. I would be embracing a communication-based school providing group therapy if it were therapy that would help my apraxic child. But it won't. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 There tons of articles here that will be helpful http://www.apraxia-kids.org/site/c.chKMI0PIIsE/b.788447/k.6056/Diagnosis_and_Tre\ atment/apps/nl/newsletter3.asp If this link doesn't work, got to www.apraxia-kids.org then select LEARN ABOUT APRAXIA on the left hand menu then LIBRARY Faeth ha scritto: > Do you have those copies? I would love to show them to the public school my twins attend? let me know what to do. Thanks so much. > > (Faeth) Apraxic twins > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 This is right off the apraxia-kids web site. But the web site doesn't print well, so here it is in a word document if this doesn't get filtered. Maybe can post this somehow. Highlighted are the key recommendations (page 4-5) re 1:1 speech therapy and the recommendation from NIH etc. - RE: [ ] School district philosophy that 1:1 individualST not warranted or necessary in age 3-5 years Do you have those copies? I would love to show them to the public school my twins attend? let me know what to do. Thanks so much. (Faeth) Apraxic twins <claudiamorris@...> wrote: Thanks for the advice. Actually I pulled off 5 pages of quotes recommending intensive, frequent 1:1 ST, and warnings of regression when therapy is stopped from the apraxia-kids website, including NIH recommendations, those from Mayo clinic and other experts on apraxia. I just don't understand how a school district can say " its not their philosophy " when the NIH has come of with recommendations. I would be embracing a communication-based school providing group therapy if it were therapy that would help my apraxic child. But it won't. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 FYI - At the end of each page of the articles on the website is an icon for " PRINTABLE DOC " - maybe that will help printing easier ...or as suggested, copy it into a .doc file first. :-) wrote > This is right off the apraxia-kids web site. But the web site doesn't print > well, so here it is in a word document if this doesn't get filtered. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 Is there any way to post the word document that was attached to this mail? - RE: [ ] School district philosophy that 1:1 individualST not warranted or necessary in age 3-5 years Do you have those copies? I would love to show them to the public school my twins attend? let me know what to do. Thanks so much. (Faeth) Apraxic twins <claudiamorris@...> wrote: Thanks for the advice. Actually I pulled off 5 pages of quotes recommending intensive, frequent 1:1 ST, and warnings of regression when therapy is stopped from the apraxia-kids website, including NIH recommendations, those from Mayo clinic and other experts on apraxia. I just don't understand how a school district can say " its not their philosophy " when the NIH has come of with recommendations. I would be embracing a communication-based school providing group therapy if it were therapy that would help my apraxic child. But it won't. - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 There are some problems with the web site - it would never print that way for me. But all articles of interest can by copied over to a word file. - Re: [ ] School district philosophy that 1:1 individualST not warranted or necessary in age 3-5 years FYI - At the end of each page of the articles on the website is an icon for " PRINTABLE DOC " - maybe that will help printing easier ...or as suggested, copy it into a .doc file first. :-) wrote > This is right off the apraxia-kids web site. But the web site doesn't print > well, so here it is in a word document if this doesn't get filtered. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 Hi , I will make sure a copy of this goes to Mikel who was the co founder of apraxia kids, built and hosted the first and original apraxia kids website (the one with all of her incredible drawings) for the first 7 years using her own family's monies, and today is one of the co founders of Speechville. In fact I'll copy all of the board members of Speechville! http://www.speechville.com/about.html Just in case you have not seen the one on one info at Speechville and/or CHERAB: One on One Therapy A Review of Apraxia Remediation The Cherab Foundation gratefully acknowledges permission to print the following, cited by Hecker, a parent advocate for her apraxic son, . " The type of treatment appeared to influence whether patients improved. More patients improved and improvement was greater in Group A, individual stimulus-response treatment, than in Group B, group treatment. These result imply the way to treat AOS (Apraxia Of Speech) is to treat is aggressively by direct manipulation and not by general group discussion. This is consistent with what has been recommended (Rosenbek, 1978). The type of treatment appeared to influence whether improvement occurred or not. Four of the five patients who did not improve received group treatment with no direct manipulation of their motor speech deficit. " Apraxia of Speech: Physiology, Acoustics, Linguistics, Management. Rosenbek et al. 1984 " The frequency of professional speech assistance is critical in the habilitation of children with developmental apraxia of speech. This disability call for all-out attention and deserve serious instruction to the limits of the child's attention and motivation. When normal children begin their formal education, they do not go to school two or three times a week for just a half-hour at a time, even in kindergarten. Thus, I do no expect to provide special education for children with developmental apraxia of speech on a cursory basis, for it may be the most important part of the entire education. " Current Therapy of Communication Disorders, Dysarthria and Apraxia. H. Perkins 1984 " They use the term developmental apraxia to describe a disorder that is not confined to the phonologic and motoric aspects of speech production, but includes difficulty in selection and sequencing of syntactic and lexical units during utterance productions. Most clinicians agree that planning the appropriate treatment approach and methods is crucial to the efficacy of intervention. A variety of factors can facilitate treatment of DAS. DAS is often characterized as being resistant to traditional methods of treatment. Group therapy decreases the potential of responses per session for each child and therefore, the motor practice needed by children with apraxia and dysarthria. " Treatment of Motor Speech Disorders in Children by Edythe Strand in " Seminars of Speech and Language " Vol. 16, No. 2. May 1995 " Early stages of treatment need to be carried out on a one-to-one basis for it is only in this way that the patient can learn to develop his own particular strengths and adopt compensatory measures for weaknesses. " Disorders of Articulation, Aspects of Dysarthria and Verbal Apraxia. Margaret 1984 " These children do not seem to make good progress with the usual approaches to clinical treatment of articulation problems. Carefully structures programs that combine muscle movement, speech sound production, and sometimes even work on grammar seem to get better results. " " Developmental Verbal Dyspraxia " on Healthtouch Online, ASHA website " Children must be seen one-on-one, at least in the early stages of treatment. " Kaufman, author of the Kaufman Speech Praxis Test and expert on Apraxia, on The Kaufman Children's Center for Speech and Language Disorders website . " However, many of the theories, principles, and hierarchies described for adult apraxics are potentially helpful to the clinician designing motor-programming remedial program for an individual child. (We stress the word individual since the program development for children with DAS must meet the individual, and often unique, needs of each child.) " " Intensive services are needed for the child with DAS. Children with DAS are reported to make slow progress in the remediation of their speech problems. They seem to require a great deal of professional service, typically done on an individual basis. Therefore, clinicians working with DAS must accommodate this need and schedule as much intervention time with the child as the child and/or his/her schedule can allow. The definition " intensive " varies from clinician to clinician and from work setting to work setting. Rosenbek (1985), when discussing therapy with adult apraxics, defines the word as meaning that the patient and the clinician should have daily sessions: Macaluso Haynes (1978), Haynes (1985), and Blakeley (1983) also advocate daily remediation sessions. " Also, " our experience has been that the overall outcome has been best for those children with DAS who were identified as possibly exhibiting DAS and received services as very young children. " Developmental Apraxia of Speech, Theory and Clinical Practice. Penelope Hall et al. 1994 " We recommend therapy as intensively and as often as possible. Five short sessions (e.g., 30 minutes) a week is better than two 90 minute sessions. Regression will occur if the therapy is discontinued for a long-time (e.g. over the summer). Most of the therapy (2-3/week) must be provided individually. If group therapy is provided, it will not help unless the other children in the group have the same diagnoses and are at the same level phonologically. " Velleman, authority and published author on Apraxia, on her website (velleman.html). " Our clinic has had tremendous success with the half-hour format, we find these session to be very intense, packed with therapy, and have little down time. The earlier and more intensive the intervention, the more successful the therapy. Group therapy can be effective for articulation disorders and some phonological processing disorder, but children with Apraxia really need intensive individual therapy. " Lucker-Lazerson, MA, CCC-SLP, and Clinic Coordinator for the ish Rite Clinic for Childhood Language Disorders San Diego, on the Apraxia Kids website. " A few major principles in particular have direct relevance to the treatment of motor speech disorders. The most obvious, yet surprisingly often disregarded, is that of repetitive practice. Pairing of auditory and visual stimuli is included in most approaches, and intensive, frequent, and systematic practice toward habituation of a particular movement pattern is suggested instead of teaching isolated phonemes. It is important to consider the treatment needs of each child and attempt to find creative solutions that > allow frequent individual treatment for children that will most benefit. " Childhood Motor Speech Disorders Edythe Strand " Given the controlled conditions stipulated in the studies..., it is clear that speech dyspraxia can respond to therapy. All approaches involved an intensive pattern of therapy. Even if not seen daily by a therapist, patients carried out daily practice. " Acquired Speech Dyspraxia, Disorders of Communication: The Science of Intervention. Margaret M. Leahy 1989 " Consistent and frequent therapy sessions are recommended. The intensity and duration of each session will depend on the child. At least three sessions per week are recommended for the child to make consistent progress. " Easy Does it for Apraxia-Preschool, Materials Book. Robin Strode and Chamberlain " In stark contrast, the children with apraxia of speech whose parent stated that three quarters of their child's speech could be understood following treatment, required 151 individual sessions (ranging from 144-168). In other words, the children with apraxia of speech required 81% more individual treatment sessions than the children with severe phonological disorders in order to achieve a similar function outcome. " Functional treatment outcomes for young children with motor-speech disorders by in Clinical Management of Motor Speech Disorders A.J. Caruso and E.A. Strand 1999. (In addition to the information on this page, a great page on 1:1 therapy is at Apraxia-Kids) 1:1 Therapy Question Sent To Children's Apraxia Network: Advice From our nonprofit's SLS/MA/ EDUCATIONAL CONSULTANT, Cheryl - SLS/MA (Hi Cheryl you quiet little cutie you! http://www.cherab.org/about/cheryl.html ) It is interesting to note that when a child is receiving Early Intervention services in the home, therapy is 1:1. It is also interesting to note that children as young as 6 months of age have received 1:1 services. Every apraxic child is different, with a diagnosis of severe apraxia, the child would benefit from 1:1 therapy. What data is the school SLP (Speech Language Pathologist) presenting indicating that the age of 5 is too young for 1:1 services? Remember when a request for services is not given as requested, the denying party must give a written rationale as to why. The IEP (Individualized Education Program) is an individualized Education Program. How will the SLP (Speech & Language Pathologist) address the severe oral motor needs of the child within the group setting? What are the short and long term goals and objectives that are specific to the nature of this child's severe apraxia? Does the SLP plan to devote x amount of minutes providing 1:1 therapy to your child within the group setting? Your child's disability of apraxia affects his involvement and progress in the general curriculum and access to nonacademic and extra curricular activities due to the fact that he is not able to communicate appropriately to school personnel when needed and communicate effectively through speech and/or writing to class- mates and teachers. The severity of his disability warrants 1:1 speech therapy intervention. Your child's disability of apraxia of speech affects his ability to engage in age relevant behaviors that typical students of the same age would be expected to be performing or would have achieved {IDEA-Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.): 34 C.F R.300.347 (a)(1)(i) Statue 20 United State Code (U.S.C.) 1414 (d)(1)(A)(i)(1). I am requesting that the parent draft a letter to the Dr. of the Child Study Team including the information listed above. Indicate that you are not in agreement with the type /amount/duration of the speech therapy services that will be provided to your child. State that you are seeking 1:1 therapy services for your child because... Send the letter certified receipt return requested. Send a copy to the SLP, the District Superintendent of Schools, and Board of Education President. Severe Apraxia requires the parent to advocate for 1:1 services in the area of speech therapy. http://www.cherab.org/information/speechlanguage/therapyintensity.html Here's some more from Speechville including one quote from apraxia kids the website that originally built and hosted for over 7 years. http://www.speechville.com/diagnosis-destinations/apraxia/speech-therapy-frequen\ cy.html It's also worked for people to bring in The Late Talker book which of course has in it the severity intervention matrix. (we also were granted permission to put this up on the CHERAB and Speechville websites) And as Kathy from this group always says -you can let them know you know the authors and that we are interested in what the outcome for our next book. ===== Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 30, 2006 Report Share Posted May 30, 2006 Thanks for posting this! [ ] Re: School district philosophy that 1:1 individualST not warranted or necessary in age 3-5 years Hi , I will make sure a copy of this goes to Mikel who was the co founder of apraxia kids, built and hosted the first and original apraxia kids website (the one with all of her incredible drawings) for the first 7 years using her own family's monies, and today is one of the co founders of Speechville. In fact I'll copy all of the board members of Speechville! http://www.speechville.com/about.html Just in case you have not seen the one on one info at Speechville and/or CHERAB: One on One Therapy A Review of Apraxia Remediation The Cherab Foundation gratefully acknowledges permission to print the following, cited by Hecker, a parent advocate for her apraxic son, . " The type of treatment appeared to influence whether patients improved. More patients improved and improvement was greater in Group A, individual stimulus-response treatment, than in Group B, group treatment. These result imply the way to treat AOS (Apraxia Of Speech) is to treat is aggressively by direct manipulation and not by general group discussion. This is consistent with what has been recommended (Rosenbek, 1978). The type of treatment appeared to influence whether improvement occurred or not. Four of the five patients who did not improve received group treatment with no direct manipulation of their motor speech deficit. " Apraxia of Speech: Physiology, Acoustics, Linguistics, Management. Rosenbek et al. 1984 " The frequency of professional speech assistance is critical in the habilitation of children with developmental apraxia of speech. This disability call for all-out attention and deserve serious instruction to the limits of the child's attention and motivation. When normal children begin their formal education, they do not go to school two or three times a week for just a half-hour at a time, even in kindergarten. Thus, I do no expect to provide special education for children with developmental apraxia of speech on a cursory basis, for it may be the most important part of the entire education. " Current Therapy of Communication Disorders, Dysarthria and Apraxia. H. Perkins 1984 " They use the term developmental apraxia to describe a disorder that is not confined to the phonologic and motoric aspects of speech production, but includes difficulty in selection and sequencing of syntactic and lexical units during utterance productions. Most clinicians agree that planning the appropriate treatment approach and methods is crucial to the efficacy of intervention. A variety of factors can facilitate treatment of DAS. DAS is often characterized as being resistant to traditional methods of treatment. Group therapy decreases the potential of responses per session for each child and therefore, the motor practice needed by children with apraxia and dysarthria. " Treatment of Motor Speech Disorders in Children by Edythe Strand in " Seminars of Speech and Language " Vol. 16, No. 2. May 1995 " Early stages of treatment need to be carried out on a one-to-one basis for it is only in this way that the patient can learn to develop his own particular strengths and adopt compensatory measures for weaknesses. " Disorders of Articulation, Aspects of Dysarthria and Verbal Apraxia. Margaret 1984 " These children do not seem to make good progress with the usual approaches to clinical treatment of articulation problems. Carefully structures programs that combine muscle movement, speech sound production, and sometimes even work on grammar seem to get better results. " " Developmental Verbal Dyspraxia " on Healthtouch Online, ASHA website " Children must be seen one-on-one, at least in the early stages of treatment. " Kaufman, author of the Kaufman Speech Praxis Test and expert on Apraxia, on The Kaufman Children's Center for Speech and Language Disorders website . " However, many of the theories, principles, and hierarchies described for adult apraxics are potentially helpful to the clinician designing motor-programming remedial program for an individual child. (We stress the word individual since the program development for children with DAS must meet the individual, and often unique, needs of each child.) " " Intensive services are needed for the child with DAS. Children with DAS are reported to make slow progress in the remediation of their speech problems. They seem to require a great deal of professional service, typically done on an individual basis. Therefore, clinicians working with DAS must accommodate this need and schedule as much intervention time with the child as the child and/or his/her schedule can allow. The definition " intensive " varies from clinician to clinician and from work setting to work setting. Rosenbek (1985), when discussing therapy with adult apraxics, defines the word as meaning that the patient and the clinician should have daily sessions: Macaluso Haynes (1978), Haynes (1985), and Blakeley (1983) also advocate daily remediation sessions. " Also, " our experience has been that the overall outcome has been best for those children with DAS who were identified as possibly exhibiting DAS and received services as very young children. " Developmental Apraxia of Speech, Theory and Clinical Practice. Penelope Hall et al. 1994 " We recommend therapy as intensively and as often as possible. Five short sessions (e.g., 30 minutes) a week is better than two 90 minute sessions. Regression will occur if the therapy is discontinued for a long-time (e.g. over the summer). Most of the therapy (2-3/week) must be provided individually. If group therapy is provided, it will not help unless the other children in the group have the same diagnoses and are at the same level phonologically. " Velleman, authority and published author on Apraxia, on her website (velleman.html). " Our clinic has had tremendous success with the half-hour format, we find these session to be very intense, packed with therapy, and have little down time. The earlier and more intensive the intervention, the more successful the therapy. Group therapy can be effective for articulation disorders and some phonological processing disorder, but children with Apraxia really need intensive individual therapy. " Lucker-Lazerson, MA, CCC-SLP, and Clinic Coordinator for the ish Rite Clinic for Childhood Language Disorders San Diego, on the Apraxia Kids website. " A few major principles in particular have direct relevance to the treatment of motor speech disorders. The most obvious, yet surprisingly often disregarded, is that of repetitive practice. Pairing of auditory and visual stimuli is included in most approaches, and intensive, frequent, and systematic practice toward habituation of a particular movement pattern is suggested instead of teaching isolated phonemes. It is important to consider the treatment needs of each child and attempt to find creative solutions that > allow frequent individual treatment for children that will most benefit. " Childhood Motor Speech Disorders Edythe Strand " Given the controlled conditions stipulated in the studies..., it is clear that speech dyspraxia can respond to therapy. All approaches involved an intensive pattern of therapy. Even if not seen daily by a therapist, patients carried out daily practice. " Acquired Speech Dyspraxia, Disorders of Communication: The Science of Intervention. Margaret M. Leahy 1989 " Consistent and frequent therapy sessions are recommended. The intensity and duration of each session will depend on the child. At least three sessions per week are recommended for the child to make consistent progress. " Easy Does it for Apraxia-Preschool, Materials Book. Robin Strode and Chamberlain " In stark contrast, the children with apraxia of speech whose parent stated that three quarters of their child's speech could be understood following treatment, required 151 individual sessions (ranging from 144-168). In other words, the children with apraxia of speech required 81% more individual treatment sessions than the children with severe phonological disorders in order to achieve a similar function outcome. " Functional treatment outcomes for young children with motor-speech disorders by in Clinical Management of Motor Speech Disorders A.J. Caruso and E.A. Strand 1999. (In addition to the information on this page, a great page on 1:1 therapy is at Apraxia-Kids) 1:1 Therapy Question Sent To Children's Apraxia Network: Advice From our nonprofit's SLS/MA/ EDUCATIONAL CONSULTANT, Cheryl - SLS/MA (Hi Cheryl you quiet little cutie you! http://www.cherab.org/about/cheryl.html ) It is interesting to note that when a child is receiving Early Intervention services in the home, therapy is 1:1. It is also interesting to note that children as young as 6 months of age have received 1:1 services. Every apraxic child is different, with a diagnosis of severe apraxia, the child would benefit from 1:1 therapy. What data is the school SLP (Speech Language Pathologist) presenting indicating that the age of 5 is too young for 1:1 services? Remember when a request for services is not given as requested, the denying party must give a written rationale as to why. The IEP (Individualized Education Program) is an individualized Education Program. How will the SLP (Speech & Language Pathologist) address the severe oral motor needs of the child within the group setting? What are the short and long term goals and objectives that are specific to the nature of this child's severe apraxia? Does the SLP plan to devote x amount of minutes providing 1:1 therapy to your child within the group setting? Your child's disability of apraxia affects his involvement and progress in the general curriculum and access to nonacademic and extra curricular activities due to the fact that he is not able to communicate appropriately to school personnel when needed and communicate effectively through speech and/or writing to class- mates and teachers. The severity of his disability warrants 1:1 speech therapy intervention. Your child's disability of apraxia of speech affects his ability to engage in age relevant behaviors that typical students of the same age would be expected to be performing or would have achieved {IDEA-Code of Federal Regulations (C.F.R.): 34 C.F R.300.347 (a)(1)(i) Statue 20 United State Code (U.S.C.) 1414 (d)(1)(A)(i)(1). I am requesting that the parent draft a letter to the Dr. of the Child Study Team including the information listed above. Indicate that you are not in agreement with the type /amount/duration of the speech therapy services that will be provided to your child. State that you are seeking 1:1 therapy services for your child because... Send the letter certified receipt return requested. Send a copy to the SLP, the District Superintendent of Schools, and Board of Education President. Severe Apraxia requires the parent to advocate for 1:1 services in the area of speech therapy. http://www.cherab.org/information/speechlanguage/therapyintensity.html Here's some more from Speechville including one quote from apraxia kids the website that originally built and hosted for over 7 years. http://www.speechville.com/diagnosis-destinations/apraxia/speech-therapy-fre quency.html It's also worked for people to bring in The Late Talker book which of course has in it the severity intervention matrix. (we also were granted permission to put this up on the CHERAB and Speechville websites) And as Kathy from this group always says -you can let them know you know the authors and that we are interested in what the outcome for our next book. ========= Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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