Speech therapy also addresses the mechanics of producing words, such as articulation, pitch, fluency, and volume. Some children only need help with language, while others have the most problems with the mechanics of speech. Some kids need help with multiple facets of speech, language, and swallowing. Adults may need speech therapy after a stroke or traumatic accident, stroke, brain injury, or surgery that changes their ability to use language or their ability to swallow.
What Speech-Language Pathologists Do
The professional in charge of your child’s speech therapy is called a speech-language pathologist (SLP). Older or less formal terms for these experts are speech therapists or speech teachers. The speech-language pathologist has earned a master’s degree from an accredited speech and language program, completed a clinical fellowship, and earned a certification to practice in the field. The SLP can perform testing to determine your child’s needs and what approaches will work best. The SLP will work to find fun activities to strengthen your child in areas of weakness. For mechanics, this might involve exercises to strengthen the tongue and lips, such as blowing on whistles or licking up Cheerios. For language, they might play games to stimulate word retrieval, comprehension, or conversation.
Types of Speech Therapy Services for Children
.Common types of speech therapy services children need include:
Speech therapy for toddlers who are delayed in developing speechSpeech therapy for apraxia, the difficulty with producing certain sounds and syllablesSpeech therapy for stutteringSpeech therapy for aphasia, which is difficulty with language expression and understanding due to brain injuryTherapy for difficulty with swallowing
Speech Therapy as Part of an IEP
If your child has an Individualized Education Plan (IEP), speech therapy may be provided by their school. The services should be provided by a therapist who is certified by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA). A speech therapist should be part of your child’s IEP team, both for evaluating your child’s speech and language abilities as well as deciding how therapy should be administered (be it in a group or individually, in class or as a pull-out, and once or twice a week or more). You may also choose to get speech therapy outside of school. Some speech-language pathologists will come to your home for therapy sessions. Ask questions at the start of and throughout the school year to monitor the service delivery. Be sure to check with both the therapist’s office and your insurance to find out what kind of speech therapy and how much of it is covered.