Title: Should We or Shouldn
1Should We or Shouldnt We?
- Speech Pathologists in Education
Paediatric Language EBP Group 2008 Brooke
Funnell (Leader) Brooke.Funnell_at_sswahs.nsw.gov.au
2Should Speech Pathologists Work in Schools?
3How Should Speech Pathologists Work in Schools?
4In school-aged children with SLI, is a
school-based treatment model an effective way of
managing SLI in the classroom?
- In school-aged children with SLI, is an
in-class, school-based model better than a
withdrawal model in managing SLI in the
classroom?
5In school-based treatment for school-aged
children with SLI, is a collaborative or
consultative model better than withdrawal?
6The Papers
- Tollerfield, I. (2003). The process of
collaboration within a special school setting an
exploration of the ways in which skills and
knowledge are shared and barriers are overcome
when a teacher and speech language therapist
collaborate. Child Language Teaching Therapy,
67-84 - Wren, Y., Roulstone, S., Parkhouse, J., Hall, B.
(2001). A model for a mainstream school-based
speech and language therapy service. Child
Language Teaching Therapy, 107-127. - Hirst, E., Britton, L. (1998). Specialised
service to children with specific language
impairment in mainstream schools. International
Journal of Language Communication Disorders,
33, supp.
7The Papers
- McGinty, A.S., Justice, L. (2006).
Classroom-Based versus Pull-Out Interventions A
review of the experimental evidence. EBP Briefs,
1 (1).
8The Papers
- Farber, J.G. Klein, E.R. (1999).
Classroom-Based Assessment of a Collaborative
Intervention Program With Kindergarten and
First-Grade Students. Language, Speech Hearing
Services in Schools, 30 (1), 83-91.
9The Papers
- Cirrin, F.M. Gillam, R.B. (2008). Language
Intervention Practices for School-Age Children
With Spoken Language Disorders A Systematic
Review. Language, Speech Hearing Services in
Schools, 39, S110-137.
10The Papers
- Throneburg, R., Calvert, L., Sturm, J.,
Paramboukas, A., Paul, P. (2000). A Comparison of
Service Delivery Models Effects of Curricular
Vocabulary Skills in the School Setting. American
Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 9, 10-20. -
-
-
- CBL Students with SLI can make positive changes
in their knowledge of curricular vocabulary in
all 3 service deliveries (collaborative,
consultative and withdrawal) but make more change
in the collaborative model. Collaborative
planning is essential for successful joint
teaching programs.
11The Papers
- Hadley, P.A., Simmerman, A., Long, M., Luna, M.
(2000). Facilitating Language Development for
Inner-City Children Experimental Evaluation of a
Collaborative, Classroom-based Intervention.
Language, Speech Hearing Services in Schools,
31, 280-295. -
-
- CBL At risk students in Kindergarten 1st
grade involved in collaborative planning and
teaching between class teachers and SLPs
demonstrated greater change in regards to
receptive and expressive vocabulary, as well as
letter-sound associations, but no broad
improvement in phonological awareness skills when
compared with grade-matched peers who werent
receiving collaborative intervention.
12The CATs Clinical Bottom Line
-
- Were not there yet but the generally feeling is
that all forms of intervention work (traditional
pull-out, consultative and collaborative),
however collaborative is the best though it is
the most time consuming and costly.
13Evidence in Practice
14Evidence in Practice
15Evidence in Practice
162008s Achievements
- Academics
- Thank you Natalie Munro Kimberley Docking
- New members
- Attendance
- Thank you everyone
- Teleconferencing
- 3/4
- ACT link ups
17Where To Now?
- Comprehension
- Specific treatment options teaching text types
- ASD