Dee0522
And then there were four...
Member since 6/09 2088 total posts
Name: Denise
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Re: Speech Therapy Question
DS' speech therapist also comes 2x a week for 45-min sessions. She brings a bag of toys, puzzles, books, etc. and she'll take one thing out at a time for DS to focus on (sometimes she uses his own toys). As they play with each item, she repeats words over and over that relate to it. If it's a puzzle, she'll keep saying "in, out, in, out" while he puts the pieces in. Also, since she does PROMPT therapy with him, she will try to shape his mouth into the different sounds. If they're playing with something that rolls or bounces, she'll repeat words like that "roll, bounce, throw, catch". Always one word at a time. I can't speak for how all sessions go, but my DS has a pretty significant delay (he's 2.5 and only says "mama"...) so she really concentrates on one-word actions.
She does let him take the lead usually... whatever item he gravitates to, she'll follow him and work with it. We had another therapist initially who insisted on having him sit still in the same spot and focus on the toy SHE wanted him to play with, and that just didn't work out very well. She just had a completely different method and we ended up asking for a new therapist because it was only making DS frustrated and uncooperative when she tried to force him to play with certain things.
For us, having the therapist follow DS' lead works MUCH better for everyone.
Good luck!
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nov04libride
big brother <3
Member since 5/05 14672 total posts
Name: Me
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Re: Speech Therapy Question
Same as above--mostly play therapy, with some books. If they suspect Apraxia, they may do PROMPT (touching face to form words). if they enjoy it, consider it a success.
My son had speech for 1.5 years (at age 3) before we saw a great deal of progress. Hard to say whether it was due to maturation or the therapy, but it can't hurt. Don't expect overnight success--I would say a minimum of 6 months before measurable increases.
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