Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Additional speech therapist...

Last week we started taking Ella to see a private speech therapist, as a supplement to the school-based therapy she gets right now. So far she's had two visits, but these have mostly focused on evaluating Ella's existing speech in detail (using parts of a Kaufman Speech Praxis test).

This isn't to say the school system isn't doing a good job, but the school environment and private therapy settings offer different advantages. The school environment offers a lot of other kids her age to model from, as well as a mixture of both group and one-on-one speech therapy. However, neither of us are present at school, and we do not have frequent interactions with her therapists. This means that our at-home efforts are a little unguided and only sync-up with the school once a month or so.

The private therapy, on the other hand, is all one-on-one and there's no peers to learn from. However, one of us attends each session, and her therapist intends to start giving us plans for at-home therapy tactics.

Adding another therapist now also seems very appropriate. Since she got her glasses she's made a lot of progress in the "raw fundamentals" of speech. This seems to us (and her school therapists agree) to be a very good time to increase the intensity of her therapy and catch her up a bit now that she's starting to pick things up faster.

As for her speech progress, we've recently seen several new bits of speech progress emerge:

-she combines "hi" with a name to form a two-word greeting. (Hi Dada)
-she uses a lot more different letter combinations than before in her babbling.
-she's started jargoning where she's stringing together a stream of different syllables, rather than just repeating the same one or two. ("nabooka dooga aeee!" instead of "booka booka booka")

Of course, there's lots of things she's still having trouble with, such as sounds that involve bringing the tip of your tongue up (t, l, etc.), sounds using the teeth (f, v, th, s) and most sound combinations that involve going from an open jaw to a mostly closed one. But that's what we're all working on.


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