In Brief and Critical Friends (Summer 09)
In Brief and Critical Friends (Summer 09)
In Brief and Critical Friends (Summer 09)
In Brief
`In Brief is a new section of Speech & Language Therapy in Practice for 2009 suggested by readers to showcase short, practical ideas. One lucky contributor in each issue will receive 50 in vouchers from Speechmark, a company which publishes a wide range of practical resources for health and education professionals working with people of all ages (visit www.speechmark.net for more information). Brief items (up to 500 words) may include therapy or assessment tips or a description of a resource you have developed. It may also be a reflection on the best piece of advice I have been given, or the things I wish theyd told me at University. Although what you write will be substantially your own work, please acknowledge any influences. E-mail your entries to avrilnicoll@speechmag.com.
Gillian Hayes is a speech and language therapist at the Centre dAudio Phonologie in Luxembourg. Working single-handedly, and with only 20 minutes allocated to screen each child, she has had to develop simple and efficient methods of informal assessment and parent-and-child group therapy. She offers these tips to readers: Articulation How to sort out lateralised articulation of / ,t , d/: ask the client to say the word <tie> slowly, then with lip rounding, then faster. The resultant approximation to /t / is very workable and tends to spontaneously become /t / before long. Language If a child says one word, repeat it back using two. If he says two words together, repeat them back using three. This can often be the only bit of advice parents remember but, by following it, they manage to do quite a lot of the suggestions in Hanen (www.hanen.org) automatically: slowing down, repeating, reducing, talking about childs interest, no pressure of questions. Useful resources Colourful bag to pull toys out of Mr Potato Head (www.mrpotatohead.com) Early Learning Centre post box (www.elc.co.uk) Black Sheep Press picture sheets (www.blacksheeppress. co.uk) My own Teddy stories for symbolic play
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