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Direct Speech Production InterventionsWilliams, A. Lynn, McLeod, Sharynne, McCauley, R. J. 08 April 2010 (has links)
Book Summary: With detailed discussion and invaluable video footage of 23 treatment interventions for speech sound disorders (SSDs) in children, this textbook and DVD set should be part of every speech-language pathologist's professional preparation. Focusing on children with functional or motor-based speech disorders from early childhood through the early elementary period, this textbook gives preservice SLPs critical analyses of a complete spectrum of evidence-based phonological and articulatory interventions.
This textbook fully prepares SLPs for practice with a vivid inside look at intervention techniques in action through high-quality DVD clips large and varied collection of intervention approaches with widespread use across ages, severity levels, and populations proven interventions in three categories: direct speech production, broader contexts such as perceptual intervention, and speech movements clear explanations of the evidence behind the approaches so SLPs can evaluate them accurately contributions by well-known experts in SSDs from across the US, Canada, Australia, and the UK
An essential core text for pre-service SLPs—and an important professional resource for practicing SLPs, early interventionists, and special educators—this book will help readers make the best intervention decisions for children with speech sound disorders.
Evidence-based intervention approaches—demonstrated in DVD clips—such as: minimal pairs perceptual intervention core vocabulary stimulability treatment intervention for developmental dysarthria the psycholinguistic approach
Interventions for Speech Sound Disorders in Children is a part of the Communication and Language Intervention Series
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Adapting Parks and Recreation Programs to Meet the Needs of Children with Special NeedsBoggs, Teresa 01 January 2009 (has links)
No description available.
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Positive Eating Program for ParentsBoggs, Teresa 01 January 2011 (has links)
The goals of the program are to (1) increase food awareness, (2) decrease anxiety to new food textures and types, (3) provide consistent and appropriate mealtime behaviors and (4) comprehensive parent training and collaboration to facilitate generalization of new feeding behaviors across context.
Additionally, participation in cultivating a vegetable garden exposes children to different sensory experiences and foods. The program is appropriate for infants to elementary school and meets one day per week for 2 hour sessions. A program for older children is being developed.
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The Effects of Individualized Training on a Child with AutismBoggs, Teresa, Bell, S. 01 January 2008 (has links)
No description available.
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More Than WordsBoggs, Teresa 01 January 2007 (has links)
No description available.
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Pre-Linguistic Children with Cleft Palate: Growth of Gesture, Vocalization, and Word UseScherer, Nancy J., Boyce, Sarah, Martin, Gerri 27 September 2013 (has links)
Children with cleft lip and/or palate show early delays in speech and vocabulary development that may have an impact on later communication and social development. While delays in the complexity of babbling may put children at risk for later delays in speech and language development, there is considerable variability in development. This study focused on the rate of children's communication acts, canonical vocalizations, and word use as they made the transition from the pre-linguistic to linguistic development. The study included 15 children with non-syndromic cleft lip and/or palatewho were seen at three time points between 17–34 months age. Communication rates were calculated from parent–child language samples collected during play activities. Assignment to linguistic stages was based on the children's expressive vocabulary, as reported on the MacArthur Communicative Development Inventory: Words and Sentences. From the pre-linguistic to linguistic level, the children's average rate per minute of: communicative acts overall increased significantly from 1.49 to 3.07 per minute; canonical vocalizations from 0.21 to 0.90 per minute; and word usefrom 0.16 to 3.61 per minute. Rates of communicative acts were associated with later word use. It appears that children with clefts rely on non-verbal communicative acts when verbal development is delayed.
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Citations for Professor Andrzej RakowskiMiskiewicz, Andrzej, Fidecki, Tadeusz, Letkowski, Tomasz, Smurzynski, Jacek, Szlifirski, Krzysztof, Zera, Jan 01 January 2007 (has links)
Anybody who has even a passing interest in auditory perception is familiar with the work and publications of Professor Andrzej Rakowski who is an internationally acclaimed authority on musical acoustics and psychoacoustics. This citation serves a symbolic tribute to Professor Rakowski on the 50th anniversary of his scientific career.
Andrzej Rakowski was born in Warsaw, Poland, on 16 June 1931. In 1957, he received a Master of Science degree in electronic communication from the Warsaw University of Technology and a Master of Arts degree in music theory from then the State School of Music in Warsaw, now called The Fryderyk Chopin Academy of Music, in 1958. His contributions to acoustic research began during his postgraduate fellowship at Durham University, King's College, Newcastle upon Thyne, in England (1958/59), where he studied acoustics of musical instruments with E. G. Richardson. He received a doctoral degree in electronic communication from the Warsaw University of Technology in 1963, a second doctoral degree (habilitation) in art sciences (musicology) from the University of Warsaw in 1977, and became a full-professor in 1982, as conferred by the President of the Republic of Poland.
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Sharing Sensitive Information with Parents: A Guide for Early Childhood EducatorsBoggs, Teresa 01 January 2011 (has links)
No description available.
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A Model and Structure For Phonological InterventionWilliams, A. Lynn 20 April 2005 (has links)
Book Summary: This one-of-a-kind resource presents a wide range of expert opinions about phonological disorders in children, allowing readers to understand and compare diverse approaches to assessment and intervention, choose the ones that will work best, and use their new knowledge to make decisions during clinical interventions. For each of the book's three sections—Assessment and Classification, Goal and Target Selection, and Intervention —the editors pose important "frequently asked questions" for each contributor to answer, such as Which diagnostic classification system do you find useful? How does your assessment differ for children of different ages, developmental levels, or linguistic backgrounds? How do you integrate language goals with phonological goals? What factors influence your selection of treatment goals and targets? When should a child receive individual therapy as opposed to group therapy? What do you do when your intervention plan is not working?
Through the theoretical insights and practical experience each contributor shares— and a helpful conclusion that comments on all the approaches discussed — readers will have the broad and balanced knowledge they need for informed clinical decision making. Speech-language pathologists, graduate students, audiologists, and educators will use this comprehensive, accessible resource to shape their practices and improve the lives of children with phonological disorders.
Phonological Disorders in Children is a part of the Communication and Language Intervention Series
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A Multiple Oppositions Intervention ApproachWilliams, A. Lynn 19 December 2003 (has links)
Book Summary: This revised and updated volume in the Clinical Competence Series is a valuable resource for use in the care and treatment of individuals with articulation and phonological disorders. Covering articulation and phonological disorders that span client ages, populations, and settings, this text is ideal for both clinical use and in communication sciences programs. In addition to updating information from the first edition, the second edition adds two new chapters, providing an overview of speech and its disorders and addressing how children develop speech perception and production skills for communication. New to the Edition New Chapter 1: Foundations of Care, describes the social, linguistic, and biological foundations that underlie clinical care as described in this book. New Chapter 3: Speech Development, contains extensive discussion and clinically useful tables showing developmental milestones in speech perception and production, the connection between speech perception and production, and speech for purposes of communication. Updated references New appendices Revises section on distinguishing dialect from disorder and varieties of American English
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