Title: SPECIFIC TREATMENT PROGRAMS AND APPROACHES
1- SPECIFIC TREATMENT PROGRAMS AND APPROACHES
2I. INTRODUCTION
- traditional and pattern-based approaches (p.
395) - Textbook philosophy all programs contain
elements of both regardless of what we call an
approach, we are teaching motor production of
phonemes - P. 396 Children learn to produce speech sounds,
not rules. - All approaches use behavioral tx techniques
3II. TRADITIONAL APPROACH
4B. Part One Ear Training (pp. 399-400)
- Phase 1 identification
- Phase 2 isolation
- Phase 3 stimulation
- Phase 4 discrimination
5(p. 400)
- There are two forms of discrimination
- In error detection, the child has to tell when
the SLP produces the sound in error - In error correction, the child must explain why
the sound was in error and how it can be corrected
6- C. Part 2 Production TrainingSound
Establishment - D. Part 3 Production TrainingSound
Stabilization - (begin at the most complex level possible)
- Stage 1 Isolation
- Stage 2 Nonsense syllables (not functional)
- Stage 3 Words
- Stage 4 phrases (2-4 word phrases)
- Stage 5 sentences
- Stage 6 conversation
7- To help establish the production of sentences
(p. 404) - 1. Slow-motion speech SLP and Ch say target at
the same time, using a very slow rate of speech - 2. Shadowing SLP says the sentence first, then
Ch says it immediately
8E. Part 4 Transfer/Carryover
- (dont worry about definitionsuse them
interchangeably) - Vary settings, interlocutors/audience, stimuli
- Speech assignments
- Follow-up (maintenance) sessions
9CSHA Dr. Steve Skelton
10(No Transcript)
11ACTIVITIES AND IDEAS FOR ELICITING AT LEAST 150
PRODUCTIONS PER GROUP SESSION
12(No Transcript)
13(No Transcript)
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16OTHER IDEAS FOR CENTERS
- Read books or stories with target sound
- Hula hoops
- Jump rope
17(No Transcript)
18(No Transcript)
19III. MULTIPLE PHONEME APPROACH (test 4 just
lecture notes and summary on pp. 416-417)
- A. Introduction (McCabe Bradley)
- For children with 6 errors
- Highly structured
- Use multimodal cues to teach multiple phonemes
simultaneously
20- B. Phase 1 Establishment
- Step 1 Establishment of sound production
- Step 2 Holding procedure (all sounds in
isolation in each tx session)
21- C. Phase 2 Transfer
- Syllables?Words ?Phrases and sentences?reading/sto
ry/conversation - D. Phase 3 Maintenance
- 90 accuracy across speaking situations with no
external modeling
22IV. MCDONALDS SENSORIMOTOR APPROACH
- A. IntroductionAssumptions
23B. Part 1 Heighten Childs Responsiveness
- Practice syllables with nonerror sounds
- Begin with CVCV syllables
- Then go to trisyllables
- Vary vocal emphasis on syllables
24Bauman-Waengler CSHA
25C. Part 2 Reinforce Correct Articulation of
Error Sound
- Use facilitative contexts e.g. watch-sun
26McDonalds (Part 2 continued)
- 1. Slo-mo
- 2. Equal stress on both syllables
- 3. Primary stress on first syllable
- 4. Primary stress on second syllable
- 5. Child prolongs target until clinician signals
to go on (e.g., watchsssssssssun) - 6. Practice in short sentences
27- D. Part 3 Facilitate Correct Articulation of
the Target Sound in Various Contexts
28Beach-seal
29- V. Shine Prousts Sensorimotor Approach
- Based on McDonald, but more structured
- Emphasizes orientation to the speech helpers
(articulators)
30V. DISTINCTIVE FEATURE APPROACH (lecture only!)
- Based on distinctive feature analysis
- Teach a relevant sound that is missing the
feature, hope for generalization - E.g., for feature of stridency, teach /f/ and
hope it will generalize to /s, z, sh/
31VI. PAIRED-STIMULI APPROACH
- A. Introduction
- Developed by Irwin Weston, 1971
- Good for children with a few sound errors
- Capitalizes on a key word
32B. Step 1 Word Level
- Select a target sound for tx
- Identify 4 key words 2 with target in
word-initial position and 2 with target in
word-final position
33C. Step 2 Sentence Level
- Use Key Word 1 with 10 training words, only
evoke the target in a sentence - FR3 schedule of reinforcement (3 responses for 1
token) - Do 2nd, 3rd, 4th key words and then do some
alternations
34D. Step 3 Conversational Level
- Clinician and child converse
- Clinician stops the conversation immediately if
the child produces a sound incorrectly
35VII. CONTRAST THERAPY APPROACH/PHONOLOGICAL
CONTRAST APPROACHES (pp. 432 on)
- Minimal contrast training use minimal pairs
which only differ by one feature (tea-key) - Maximal pair training sounds differ by at least
2 features (cane-lane ten-men)
36(pp. 436-437)
- Multiple oppositions/multiple contrasts approach
- Not on exam
37- Begin with perceptual training
- Then, go to production training where the child
has to produce minimal pairs - Good for use with adults also
38VIII. HODSONS CYCLES APPROACH (on exam!)
- A. Introduction
- General Procedures
- 1. Stimulation (multimodal cues)
- 2. Production training
- 3. Semantic awareness contrasts
39(No Transcript)
40B. Selection of Target Patterns and Phonemes
- Top Priority
- 1. Early-developing phonological patterns
- Initial and final consonant deletion of stops,
nasals, and glides - CVC and VCV word structures
- Posterior-anterior contrasts (k-g, t-d, h)
- /s/ clusters--word initial clusters /sp, st, sm,
sn, sk/ and word-final clusters /ts, ps, ks/ - Liquids /r/ and /l/ and clusters containing these
liquids
412. Secondary Patterns
- A. Voicing contrasts, vowel contrasts
- B. Singleton stridents
- C. Other consonant clusters
- D. Other (metathesis, reduplication,
multisyllabic words, complex consonant sequences)
42C. Structure of Remediation Cycles
- 1. Train each phoneme exemplar within a target
pattern for 60 min per cycle before going to the
next phoneme - 2. Train 2 or more target phonemes in successive
weeks within a pattern before changing to the
next target pattern - (2 hours on each pattern within a cycle)
43- 3. Target only one phonological pattern per
session - 4. When all target patterns have been taught, a
cycle is complete - 5. Initiate the second cycle. Review patterns
not yet corrected, introduce new ones as
necessary - to become intelligible, most children need 3- 6
cycles of therapy
44D. Structure of Therapy Sessions
45E. Home Program
- Caretakers are asked to read the 12-item word
list once a day. - Child is asked to name the 3-5 pictures once a
day (may also produce other target words)
46IX. Oral-Motor Exercises
- PBH do not believe that oral motor exercises are
beneficial for anybody - They say research has not proven that oral motor
exercises help - Roseberrys position these exercises are very
helpful for children with oral motor problems
47X. Language Treatment for Phonological Disorders
- PBH research is inconclusive re the question
Can language therapy improve childrens
artic/phono skills? - Bottom line If the child has a language and
phonological disorder, best to do both language
and artic/phonology therapy simultaneously. - In other words, dont just do language therapy
and hope that somehow artic/phonological skills
will magically improve too ?
48Anthony et al. 2011 American Journal of
Speech-Language Pathology (4/11 issue)
49XI. Combining Therapy for Language and
Articulatory-Phonological Disorders
- We can connect phonology to childrens
morphosyntactic skills - If children have final consonant deletion or
cluster reduction, they will have problems with
some morphemes
50These morphemes include
- Past tense ed (jumped, scared)
- Plural s (pots, sidewalks)
- Regular 3rd person s (eats, runs)
- Possessive s (Grants, Bobs)
51Therapy suggestions
- If the child has final consonant deletion, use
minimal pairs which include grammatical morphemes
52For example (FCD)
- Plurals toe-toes key-keys
- Possessives Joe-Joes Ray-Rays
- Regular past tense ed show- showed
53If the child uses cluster reduction
- Plurals boat-boats cup-cups
- Possessives cat-cats Dad-Dads
- Regular past walk-walked
- Irregular past drink-drank hold-held
54We can also connect phonology to semantics
- Children with language impairments often have
difficulty with verbs - For velar fronting tame-came taught-caught
- Stopping of fricatives tee-see, toe-sew,
tip-ship - Final consonant deletion shoe-shoot, ray-rake
say-sail
55XII. Developing a Lexicon for Young Highly
Unintelligible Children with Accompanying
Language Disorders
- Use early-developing consonants with words that
are key in childrens environments - For example, we can teach
- No, puppy, baby, bye-bye, yes, happy, mama, dada,
baba (bottle), more (?), mine, please (peez), kay
(okay), potty, pee, kitty, why, go, wawa, eat
56If the child only says a few words
57DeThorne et al. 5/09 American Journal of
Speech-Language Pathology
- Looked at alternatives to imitation for
facilitating early speech development - Premise when little kids wont talk, trying to
have them imitate us often does not work - Focused on kids who dont have any underlying
problems like CAS or dysarthria
58Ideas for therapy
59(No Transcript)
60Another idea was
- Imitate child
- Research has found that the extent to which
mothers imitated their 13-month old children
predicted the timing of the childrens later
language milestones
61- For example, if the child said ba! the mother
said Ball! - This predicted the timing of things like the
childs development of her first 50 words and
using two-word combinations - We can even imitate non-speech movements (e.g.,
smiling, yawning)
62Another therapy idea from DeThorne et al. 2009
63We can also
- Use headphones for slight amplification
- Use an echo microphone or other device
- Use mirrors, puppets
64XIII. TEACHING /K/ AND /G/
- The dorsum of the tongue must raise to contact
the soft palate and form a seal which completely
blocks the air stream - The back of the tongue must suddenly pull away
from the velum to create a burst of air
65Strategies for eliciting these phonemes
66- Tell the child to hold his tongue against his
lower teeth and hold his hand in front of his
mouth to feel the burst of air as he imitates
youtell him to raise the back of his tongue - Use a mirror, and have the client imitate you
- Use a tongue depressor to push the tongue upward
and backward in the oral cavity
67(No Transcript)
68(No Transcript)
69XIV. TEACHING /S/ AND /Z/
- I like to refer to these sounds with animal
analogies - /s/ is the snake sound, and /z/ is the bee sound
70Types of Lisps
71Type 2 The interdental lisp
72Type 3 the lateral lisp
73However, we can
- Have the child strongly aspirate a /t/
- Use a bite block to stabilize production
- A bite block helps the jaw to not move around
- Have the child say /t t t t t t ssssss/
- Eventually you can get away from the bite block
74- Shape /s/ from words that end in /ts/ (like
boats or cats) - Tell Ch to drop her tongue after she says /t/
- Try having Ch strongly aspirate /t/ ?German
affricate /ts/. Have Ch prolong second part of
this affricate.
75Try this yourself
- And notice that when you make a really strong
/t/, your tongue tip drops into perfect position
for a predorsal /s/ ? - Tell the child that when her tongue drops down,
hold it there and produce an /s/
76Other techniques for /s/ include
77To develop a central airstream
78Other techniques
- Tell Ch to make a smile and hide his tongue
behind the white gate (teeth) while resting his
tongue along his upper back teeth - Tell him to blow out a straight, fine stream of
air - Place your finger in the center of his lips/teeth
for an additional cue
79Also
80XV. TECHNIQUES FOR /l/
- One of the most common errors in children is y/l
(I yike that yamp.) - I like to tell kids about the magic spot (the
alveolar ridge) - It is very important for kids to have perfect
awareness of the alveolar ridge and know exactly
where their tongue is to be placed
81(No Transcript)
82One of my very favorite techniques
83Be sure
84Other tx ideas for /l/
85Use the ribbon technique
- Place a ½ ribbon across the front of the
clients tongue so that the ends hang down to her
chin. - Then, tell her to put her tongue tip on her
alveolar ridge. - Have her say /l/ while you gently pull down on
the sides of the ribbon, which allows lateral
airflow.
86I do like
- Using /t, d, n/ as coarticulatory contexts
- E.g., ch can say na-la, na-la or da-la, da-la
87XVI. TECHNIQUES FOR /th/
- One of the very most common errors is f/th
- Mark did this until he had artic therapy in first
grade - His SLP called /th/ a lip cooler (could also be
called tongue cooler or angry goose sound)
88To teach /th/ production
- Use a mirror
- Mr. Mouth is very helpful for children
- Tell the client to open his teeth slightly
- The tongue tip must protrude between the upper
and lower central incisors
89I have found that
- Many adult accent clients are not comfortable
with their tongue protruding - They feel like the whole world is staring at them
- I do a lot of desensitization and do the
exercises in the mirror along with them - The mirror is super helpful, because they can see
that they do not look like idiots
90If the client sticks her tongue out too far
- Hold a tongue depressor about ¼ in front of her
teeth - If she can feel the tongue depressor when she
produces /th/, her tongue is coming out too far
91/th/ can be shaped from several phonemes
- /h/ techniquehave client prolong /h/, slowly
stick her tongue out while gradually closing her
mouth - Good /th/ and /h/ both voiceless fricatives
92To direct airflow through the oral cavity
- Place straw where tongue tip contacts upper and
lower front teeth, have client direct air into
straw - Put clients finger in front of his lips, have
him repeat procedure by himself - Hold a strip of paper in front of clients mouth,
near tongue tip, ask him to blow out air to make
paper move
93XVII. I HATE /r/!
94A. INTRODUCTIONORAL MOTOR EXERCISES
- Remediating /r/ is one of the most frustrating
jobs that SLPs have - It is a very complex sound that requires
precision and muscle strength - The use of oral motor techniques for helping
clients with /r/ problems is hotly debated - Some say that there is no research to support the
efficacy of oral motor exercisesthis is true
95However
- Clinically, I and many of my friends in the
profession have found them to be extremely
beneficial - I have a hypothesis that because so many children
were bottle fed and/or used pacifiers, tongue
strength did not develop adequately - Remember, for a baby, nursing requires far more
work than drinking from a bottle!
96There are many oral motor exercises
97Other fun oral motor exercises
- Put cake sprinkle at corner of Chs mouth, have
her move her tongue laterally to get it - Ch can stick her tongue forward and lick cake gel
off of a tongue depressor - Squeeze soft cheese or frosting on her hard
palate, have her lick it off
98(No Transcript)
99One SLP I know
- Tells all parents of her /r/ kids that all
liquids have to be drunk through a
strawbeginning today! - NO MORE SIPPY CUPS
- One child had pudding races with her little
brother
100Have the client practice
101B. /r/ WITH SMALL CHILDREN
- Hodson believes that we can begin working on /r/
when children are as young as 3 or 4 - With these little ones, we dont drill to
precisionbut we get it on their radar
102How do we do this with young kids?
103For example, when they are reading books with
their children
- Point out /r/
- Oh, there is your special tiger sound!
- I ask parents to model correct /r/ productions
regularly - BUTdo not push the child too hard to produce it
104C. SPECIFIC TECHNIQUES
105It is best to start each session
106(No Transcript)
107We need to be sure
- Children are sitting up straight with their feet
on the floor - Their bodies need to be stable
108It is very important
109(No Transcript)
110- I like shaping /r/ from /i/--eeeeeeeerrrr
- Helpful to smile cant make a /w/
111- A great technique is from PROMPTthe SLP puts
her fist under the clients chin and pushes
upwardthis elevates the tongue - We can use a tongue depressor to push the
clients tongue back in her mouth
112The biggest thing with /r/
- Is PRACTICE
- /r/ is hard strong lingual muscles are needed
- If the client doesnt practice, no progress!
113Remember that the foundation of all
articulation therapy is
- PRACTICE
- Retraining the muscles
- Repetitions!!