Guest guest Posted February 26, 2008 Report Share Posted February 26, 2008 Hi Beth- It would be great for the slp's to discuss their treatment with each other and with you so that they are not working on the same things at different times or so they are working on the same type of treatments. We used the Kaufman kits. Our teacher in the public school used the boardmaker with the kaufman treatment kit. We had so therapy with ot and pt at the same time privately and I purchased both Kaufman kits and did therapy at home with . His speech is very close to normal now. He has trouble with the r's and he is in 1st grade but he is an exceptional reader and is at the 2nd grade level for reading. Do you ait in at therapy? That is how I found out what homework I should be trying. > > Hello: > I am new to the group. My 3 1/2 yr old son has PDD-NOS or mild > autism. He recently has been diagnosed by both his private ST as > well as his public school ST as having characteristics of verbal > apraxia. My question is, is there a difference of treatment for > apraxia? I'm sure that is a vague questions, but I just want to make > sure that both SLP are treating him properly or if I need to move in > another direction. Any guidance would be very much appreciated. > > Sincerely, > Beth S. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 27, 2008 Report Share Posted February 27, 2008 Hello: I am new to the group. My 3 1/2 yr old son has PDD-NOS or mild autism. He recently has been diagnosed by both his private ST as well as his public school ST as having characteristics of verbal apraxia. My question is, is there a difference of treatment for apraxia? I'm sure that is a vague questions, but I just want to make sure that both SLP are treating him properly or if I need to move in another direction. Any guidance would be very much appreciated. Sincerely, Beth S. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 27, 2008 Report Share Posted February 27, 2008 http://www.suite101.com/article.cfm/speech_language_disorders/36847 Therapy Techniques Common For Apraxia Article at bottom explaining some techniques for therapy. Without knowing how much speech your son has, I will just describe what therapy has been like for my now 4.5 yr. old son. When he was 2, he had 3 words (mama, dada, Ayen-brother name) and everything else was the " mmm " sound. When he started therapy his SLP started with the long vowels using the Easy Does it for Apraxia turtles as visual cues to learn the sounds. After he mastered the long vowels, she introduced b,m,p sounds and connected them with a long vowel (bee, bye, bay, bow, boo). My son had to be taught lip placement for each sound with a lot of repetition. His mouth always seemed understimulated--like he couldn't feel what his lips,tongue,etc. were doing or suppose to do. She used little vibrating toys, flavored tongue depressers, tactile cues--touched his lips or used her fingers to shut his lips, mirrors, she would show him how to shape his lips to make sounds, etc. After he learned the lip placement, she was then able to prompt him with words--close your lips. He worked on these 3 sounds for a very long time before he could master them on his own. He use to substitute the sounds for easier sounds and needed a lot of reminding and visual cues to produce the correct sound. Also at 2 years old--the attention span wasn't very long so she would keep him going by changing up technique often by using a toy, music, giving him short breaks to play, coloring/cutting/pasting, puzzles. She was very good at keeping him interested. Now jump to 4.5 years old, he has a longer attention span and is able to sit at a table and do flip books, flash cards, mimic songs. He is now working on just articualtion using the Kaufman cards to build on multiple syllable words and correct sentence structure. Depending on where the breakdown is, is what should determine what is worked on during speech therapy. My son has always had to learn every sound to produce it correctly on his own. If your son is having just articulation errors and has a good vocabulary, therapy should be based on improving articulation. Therapy is very individualized for the child because not all children will be working on the same problems. Just recently our school therapist was able to match my son to another little girl for a group session (2 kids). This has never been an option for him because they could never find another child that had the same problem areas as my son. Hope this helps some, Tina > > Hello: > I am new to the group. My 3 1/2 yr old son has PDD-NOS or mild > autism. He recently has been diagnosed by both his private ST as > well as his public school ST as having characteristics of verbal > apraxia. My question is, is there a difference of treatment for > apraxia? I'm sure that is a vague questions, but I just want to make > sure that both SLP are treating him properly or if I need to move in > another direction. Any guidance would be very much appreciated. > > Sincerely, > Beth S. > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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