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Lateral Lisp and Obesity?

Q: My daughter has a lateral lisp and obesity. The SLP cannot seem to get her to make the correct sounds. Can obesity interfere with learning these sounds?

I have never faced this situation with any client. However, from what I know about tongue function and the lisps, I do not see how obesity might interfere with learning correct tongue position for S, Z, Sh, Zh, Ch, or J.

Perhaps your SLP does not know how to fix a lateral lisp. This is very common today. You may have to seek additional help from another SLP.

Posted in Articulation.

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Lip-Biting Habit

Q: My client constantly bites her lower lip until it swells and bleeds. She is highly intelligent, five years old, hypertonic, and has vision difficulties. Do you have suggestions?

I have never faced this situation, but I believe that the principles of helping a child stop any oral habit would apply. You have to help the child recognize what she is doing, help her understand the problems it causes, help her develop a goal for stopping, set up a reward system for achieving certain levels of stopping, identify and alleviate factors which may be perpetuating the problem (e.g., stress in the home), design activities for sitting with “quiet lips” during increasing periods of time, etc.

This could be viewed as a family problem, not just the child’s problem. Therefore you will have to assess how much the family is invested in stopping this behavior. If they are unwilling to be a part of this, or don’t care, or can’t get it together to help, then probably the most you will be able to do is to help her stop at school or in therapy, wherever you see her.

However, if the child sees this as something she wants to stop, she can do this without parental involvement. Most kids aren’t aware of their oral habits, so simply learning about it sometimes will cause them to want to diminish it, especially if they come to realize that they are getting bigger and “big girls” don’t do these things.

You are riding a fine line between helping her become aware of the problem yet avoiding shaming her about it. Please keep in mind that the client also may need psychological intervention.

I hope this helps you think this through. My book called How to Stop Thumbsucking addresses the basics of eliminating any oral habit. It is easy to read and appropriate for therapists, educators, and parents.

Posted in Oral Motor.

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Don’t Let the Issue of Evidence-Based Practice Get You Down!

Q: I have been reading your book Becoming Verbal with Childhood Apraxia. The ideas sound great and very interesting, but I did not see a complete reference list. Are there specific research studies that support the techniques that you were describing in your book? The examples included were helpful. I need some more support because of the emphasis on the evidence-based practice.

There is no reference list at the end of the book because these are all my original thoughts based upon the work of Jean Piaget, who also wrote his original thoughts. Piaget is widely considered one of the “fathers” of modern child development.

There is a complete and terrible misunderstanding today of what the term Evidence-Based Practice means. According to ASHA, the EBP is comprised of three aspects:

  1. Evidence from the research lab. ASHA calls it “Current Best Evidence.”
  2. Evidence gained from clinical experience– ASHA calls it “Clinical Expertise.”
  3. Evidence from the client himself– ASHA calls it “Client/Patient Values.”

The book of mine that you referenced regards the second arm of the EBP. It is a book about what my 35 years of clinical experiences have taught me as I have worked with hundreds of clients. It therefore represents the second arm of the EBP. Think of it as one very experienced therapist giving advice to other less experienced therapists, or to the parents of the children involved.

Please do not allow yourself to get into the trap that we can only do in therapy those things that have been researched. Most therapists do thousands of things that have never been researched. We do whatever it takes to help our clients, and we most certainly cannot limit our practice to only those things that have been studied in a laboratory. In fact, most of what we do has never been researched, and most of what is researched we must expand upon and generalize in order to apply it to our clients.

Consider this: If a technique is “proven” to work with five-year-old children, is that “proof” that the method can be used with three-year-old children? If we only can do in therapy those things that current research supports, then the answer to that is NO. And if that is the standard we are going to apply to our practice, then we are finished. Why? Because most of what we need to do has never been researched.

Consider this: Think about teaching something very simply, like pronoun “I.” Have you ever seen any research on how to teach pronoun “I”? No. Yet tens of thousands of therapists must teach pronoun “I” every day. What are they to do? They are to figure out how to teach it without the benefit of research. Often they pass their own original ideas on to other therapists who also are hungry for more ideas.

This is what I have done in that book. I gathered together the thoughts and experiences I had over several decades to share with other therapists who are stuck exactly in the same place I was stuck 35 years ago. This is what therapists always have done: They help one another.

You have to take what is in that book and compare it to your own experiences. If the ideas prove valuable to you, then you use them. If they don’t, then you don’t. This is what we do with every single method we come across, whether it’s been researched in a laboratory, or learned from another therapist, or dreamed up, or stumbled upon.

Please read further on my blog about EBP for more ideas. I have listed many resources that explain what EBP really is.

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Articulation Therapy vs. Speech Improvement

Q: There seems to be a shocking lack of knowledge “out there” about how to do articulation therapy. I recently saw a girl with an R distortion who had been in therapy with another therapist for a year with no progress. I was able to get a correct sound from her in 15 minutes! The mother was amazed that I actually worked on tongue movement and placement.

I agree, and I think I know why this is occurring. The tried-and-true methods of traditional articulation therapy are being tossed aside for lack of research. If there is no modern-day “proof” that a method words, it simply is ignored or treated with distain. Thus modern generations of SLPs are not being taught the simple procedures of our founders.

We have gone full circle in our profession, back to articulation therapy the way it was done BEFORE Van Riper. Van Riper explained that the reason he wrote his first text in 1939 was to counter the then common practice of simply having clients repeat words over and over again as a way to correct phonemes. He said––

“All the clinician would do was to ask the client to repeat [words] after her… That would go on for an hour. They felt that such a bombardment would lead to error elimination. Can you imagine that?” (Van Riper, 1993).

Now we have young therapists being taught that that is the way to do articulation therapy. I went to a conference recently where a professor was teaching how to do articulation therapy by working in the classroom. She was advocating instructing all the kids at the same time by leading group activities. She was providing no individual instruction and said it was no longer necessary!

This is old-time speech improvement, not articulation therapy.

I asked this professor about the learning differences and the problems in brain function that the truly speech impaired had. She seemed to have no idea what I was talking about, and she treated me as if I was off on some kooky tangent. I said, “But their brains don’t work the way the average child does. And what about oral movement? How will you train better jaw, lip, and tongue control in large group activities?” She just stared back at me. About half the audience knew what I was talking about, and the other half had no clue.

Unbelievable.

I am calling on all professors who teach articulation/phonology to get hold of an old Van Riper text and READ IT. I also am calling on them to carry a small caseload of clients themselves to actually discover what it takes to change phoneme production. There is no excuse for a professor of articulation/phonology not to know what articulation therapy really is. You have no business training students to do something you have no clue how to do. Learn it, or get an SLP with a Master’s Degree who knows how to do this to team-teach your class with you.

References

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L and R with Tonsils/Adenoids Problems

Q: I am seeing two elementary age brothers with a history of enlarged tonsils and adenoids that are not significant enough to warrant surgery according to the ENT. Both are difficult to understand because of their resonance issues. We are working on R and L with limited progress. I don’t know where to go with them. Speech is starting to impact reading and writing.

A child with mild-to-moderate upper respiratory problems and minor articulation errors is one of the most irksome situations we face. We know that the tonsil/adenoid problem is contributing to the speech problems, but the doctors say there is nothing to be done.

What did Charles Van Riper say we should do when faced with structural/medical problems that cannot be remediated? He said we should teach compensatory speech movements. We have to help them sound the best they can given their medical problems.

Begin with the vowels because they are probably the main root of the unintelligibility, and they may be the reason reading is being effected. Help the kids make round and resonant vowels with the mouth more open. Speaking a little louder usually makes them sound better. Sing the vowels with prolongation so they have time to process what they are hearing.  Help the client develop the image of the opera star and new auditory images of what their vowels should sound like.

Once the vowels begin to sound better, use the wide open “Ah” sound to teach R and L. In other words, teach the client to prolong/maintain his vowel sound as he moves his tongue into and out of position for L and R. Start with L: Ahhh-LLL-Ahhh-LLL-Ahhh-LLL… Teach these sounds more as if they were part of the vowel family.

The key here is that you have to teach the boys’ ears to recognize when they are being more oral and more nasal. Use a tube stretched from their mouths to their ears, and from their noses to their ears in order to teach them about their own resonance. These kids have their own internal image of what they sound like (as we all do), and this is what you are trying to re-shape. This is more akin to vocal training than it is to articulation therapy.

See the resonance keyword on this blog for more ideas.

Also, did you know that books of elocution that were published in the 19th century concerned both speech and voice for singing? Much can be gained from these early works. As a modern alternative, set yourself up to observe an excellent professional choir director or opera teacher at work with students. This is probably not your local church choir director, but a real professional who makes their living teaching the art of singing to people serious about the craft. Watch how they teach voice. You will learn far more about teaching voice and vowels than you ever will from the speech pathology community. These professionals know how to teach the voice and the vowels to be strong, round, and fully resonant.

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Use the Client’s R

Q: I attended your R course recently. It was wonderful! But I am stuck with one client. He has achieved a Tip R, but not a Back R. How much longer should I spend trying to help him get a Back R?

If the Tip R works to get the sound quality you want, then that’s what you do, and you forget about the Back R. It does not matter which one he gets.

Focus on what he can do. Make most of the session about what he is doing correctly. Review the slides from the class about working slowly and carefully on whatever he can do correctly. Build the program carefully from what he is doing right. DON’T jump to a whole bunch of different R words. Stick to what he has, and move in to words, phrases, sentences, and paragraphs with the R’s he is doing correctly.

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When to Refer to Orthodontia and ENT

Q: You mentioned orthodontic referral in one of your lectures on the lisps and R. I am wondering if you also refer to ENTs for issues relating to and resulting from mouth breathing.

I follow standard practices in SLP. Therefore I refer clients to orthodontics when there are indications that a dental malocclusion may exist, and when it seems to be interfering with sound production. I refer clients to an ENT when there are indications that there may be upper respiratory problems, undiagnosed oral structural issues, etc., that may be interfering with speech development.

Posted in Oral Motor.

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Frontal Lisp and Oral Stability

Q: I am seeing a 5-year-old male with interdental S, T, D, N, and L. He can say every sound correctly when reminded to keep back teeth together. Do I address all sounds at once or just S first? Should I still do cornerstone approach since he is stimulable or just work on drill and carryover?

As you know, each child is different. This is the process of trial and error. You will have to figure out what works best for HIM — isn’t that frustrating?

But beyond that, this is an issue of oral stability. See this post of Oral Stability and the Frontal Lisp for my thoughts.

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Eliminating Tooth Grinding

Q: I have two girls with Down syndrome who grind their teeth on a regular basis. They are the same age and function at about the same level. What strategies would you use to help with this area?

This is a tough question. We have no widely accepted strategies to eliminate tooth grinding other than the dental guard recommended by dentists. But my thinking has always been that if you can pinpoint the cause, then you can design a solution based on it. For example:

  • Some say that tooth grinding is due to stress. If so, reduce it.
  • Some say tooth grinding is just a habit. If so, use behavior modification to eliminate it.
  • Some say that tooth grinding in kids with lower cognitive skills is to relieve their boredom. If so, get the child busier.
  • Some say that the child is craving oral-tactile input. If so, give it to him by giving him oral play toys and things to chew on.
  • Some say that tooth grinding occurs in children with minor dental problems. Get the child to a good dentist for assessment, and make sure the family follows through with recommended treatment.

Let me be honest and reveal that I have never been able to completely eliminate a tooth grinding habit in a child with Down Syndrome. But many therapists talk about this as if they had, so I assume it is possible. I am going to get some input on this from other therapists and post a better answer soon.

Posted in Oral Motor.

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Robotic Speech

Q: My 7-year-old male client has a robotic speech presentation that interferes with intelligibility. He has low tone in the trunk and poor breath support. Do you have suggestions?

Usually a robotic voice makes an unintelligible child more intelligible. So maybe your client is using the robotic presentation to help him be more intelligible. In other words, maybe he knows (unconsciously) that when he speaks with equal stress on each syllable more people can understand him more often. He may be using the robotic presentation as a strategy to boost his intelligibility.

If so, I would not want to take the robotic presentation away from him. Instead I would teach him to use slightly more variety of intonation on the monotone. Maybe this should this be considered a fluency case?

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Oral-Motor/Artic Client

Q: My student has very uncoordinated oral movements and severely unintelligible speech. He is unable to elevate his tongue-tip, and therefore does not produce any alveolars. His S and Z are very frontal––like Th––and he reduces S-blends. How do I teach alveolars, and do I concentrate on S-blends or correct production of S and Z?

Your client requires a whole semester class on how the body works, and how that plays into speech movement development. Questions like yours are the hardest ones for me to answer in this format because, on the surface, it sounds like he just has trouble with phonemes, but I know that he has much bigger problems. That is why I have been putting off writing back to you. I almost don’t know where to start. So let me say a few things, and you can get back to me for further clarification on any part of it —

I saw a client very similar to yours a few weeks ago in Texas, so this is fresh on my mind ––

1) He is highly unintelligible, and he has uncoordinated OM movements, probably because he is unstable. His mouth is unstable, and probably his whole body is unstable. He probably has slightly low tone, and therefore is fixing somewhere along the spine, in the jaw, in his face, somewhere, to stay upright The combination of low tone and high tone mixed together causes his oral mechanism to be inconsistent in the way it moves. This wreaks havoc on jaw positioning, and lip and tongue positioning as a result. He needs to develop a stable jaw from a stabile body, and a tongue that is stable in the back. I don’t know if you know how to do that. This is dysarthria.

2) Don’t worry about S and Z so much when a client has no lingua-alveolars as you said your did. The lingua-alveolar phonemes emerge because the jaw begins to move up-and-down, not because the tongue begins to move. I would stimulate him for T, D, N, L, S, and Z all at this time, but I would let his jaw do the work. That means that he will substitute Th/S and Th/A. He should do that. That’s where his OM skill development is. He is at an infantile level of jaw-lip-tongue control. Therefore he will produce these phonemes like an infant would––by mostly using his jaw, and by positioning the tongue forward. Get the jaw to move MORE to stimulate these anterior phonemes.

3) He needs to learn how to move his tongue independently from his jaw. This occurs as the jaw begins to stabilize in an upward position. Therefore, I also would stimulate T, D, N, L, S, and Z with the jaw stabilized. Place something between his molars to force the tongue to move independently. Stabilize the jaw LOW for T, D, N, L to force the tip to elevate higher. Stabilize the jaw HIGH for S and Z to force the tongue to stay in the mouth more.

4) Unintelligibility also is due usually to imprecise vowels, dropped syllables, rapid rate, etc. Work on exaggerating speech. Have him speak up, speak out, and exaggerate. Practice words, phrases, and sentences of 1-5 syllables in BIG, JIGANTIC PRONUNCIATIONS.  Over-exaggerate. Practice “elephant” as “E-LE-PHANT!” Focus on the syllables. Focus on the roundness and full resonance of the vowels. Make the productions BIG. And teach him to listen to himself do all of this.

5) In regard to the clusters, I usually find it easier to get the clusters first in the final position — Cats, rats lights, boats, books, bikes… This is easier for these kids than Sp, St, Sk… It seems to be easier to sequence frication AFTER the other consonants that before them. It’s easier to say Ts that St… That way you can bring frication in right away.

Posted in Articulation, Oral Motor.

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The Long T (again)

Q: I bought your book Frontal Lisp, Lateral Lisp recently and am trying your “Long T Method.” My client can do T but not Ts. Is there still hope that I can use the Long T method or should I skip to something else? I only tried an aspirated T during one session so far.

Patience!  One session is not enough to know if a method will work or not.

Also, you seem to be trying to get him to say S.  The point of the Long T method is NOT to say S.  It’s for kids who cannot say S.

Do not try to get him to say S or Ts.  Get him to blow more air after the T.  Tell him, “Don’t say S.”

Then use this gross aspirated T in place of Ts in words like cats, boats, lights….  Tell him, “I do not want you to say S… I just want you to blow more air on your T.”

You are tricking him into producing Ts by telling him not to produce S.

See my other postings on the lateral lisps for more ideas.

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Work the Lateral Lisp Slowly

Q: I have had success with your “Long T Method” for teaching S and Z with my adolescent lateral lisper, but he continues to break down in reading and in conversation, he can do Sh and Zh on words, but he can’t do Ch or J at all. Where do I go from here? Can I expect braces to help improve his speech?

Braces will not help.  This is not a tooth problem.  It is a tongue movement problem.

You are trying to go to fast. Take your time. He needs to be lead slowly and carefully through each phoneme.  You are expecting that just because he can do one thing that he should be able to do all things.  Client who are difficult do not generalize skills that way.

You have taken my class on lateral lisp, so you will know what I am saying here –– You have used T to teach S and Z, but you also need to use E to teach Sh and Zh, and then you need to use Sh and Zh to teach Ch and J.

This is all explained in my seminar handout.  Go back and look at each of these slides carefully.

And when you work on sentences and paragraphs, make sure they are void of all other words that contain sibilants.  And make sure you are using straws throughout to double check that that airstream is in fact midline.

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The Tools of Articulation Training

Q: I am confused over the term NS-OME (Non Speech Oral Motor Exercises). Some people are saying that we cannot use things like toothettes, bite sticks, whistles, or straws in therapy. I use many things like this in therapy. Shouldn’t we do whatever we can to help our clients learn to make speech sounds?

Your question is a good one.  Yes, we are supposed to use whatever we can to help our clients learn to produce speech sounds.  Van Riper said it like this ––

“Every available device should be used to make the student understand clearly what positions of tongue, jaw, and lips are to be assumed” (Van Riper, 1954. p. 238).

But this ideas has come under criticism today because of the new notion of the NS-OME ––

“Party horns…blow ticklers…bubbles…straws… Items like these are being used across America to treat a wide range of communication disorders… [This] has elicited spirited debate (to put it mildly) among SLPs and communication scientists” (Powel, 2008, p. 374).

Let me help you with this by sharing a section from my next book.  The following is abstracted from The Marshalla Guide to 21st Century Articulation Therapy, in a chapter entitled “The Tools of Articulation Training.”  I have copied parts of the introduction to that chapter here.  The chapter itself, when the book is published, will contain an extensive list of these tools and how to use them.

The Marshalla Guide to 21st Century Articulation Therapy

The Tools of Articulation Training

Where did the idea to use an object to train speech movement come from?  Who first advocated these practices?  Is this a modern idea without historical backing?

History

The fact is that the use of objects to teach speech movement is not a new idea.  Van Riper called these the “old traditional methods” (1947, p. 185) and wrote that they have been around for hundreds of years.  He wrote about them in his discussion of phonetic placement methods ––

“For centuries, speech correctionists have used diagrams, applicators, and instruments to ensure appropriate tongue, jaw, and lip placement.  [These] phonetic placement methods are indispensable tools in the speech correctionist’s kit… Every available device should be used to make the student understand clearly what positions of tongue, jaw, and lips are to be assumed”  (Van Riper, 1954, pp. 236-8).

Van Riper said that both verbal descriptions and instruments were to be used in the process of phonetic placement.  In recent decades, however, some writers of modern articulation texts have downplayed the importance of using instruments, and they have focused our attention on using verbal descriptions.  In fact, some textbooks lead one to believe that the phonetic placement method is only about describing speech movements.  But Van Riper’s original writing clearly takes us beyond the simple verbal instruction.  Van Riper said that phonetic placement is the process of using “every available device” to guide speech production.

Van Riper devoted several pages of the early editions of his text to the use of tools in phonetic placement, but apparently he felt clumsy in their use –– “In our experience, they are more dramatic than useful” (1947, p. 187).  Van Riper was the one who drew our attention most solidly to ear training.  He wrote that ear training was the most important aspect of any articulation program.  He said that we always should start the teaching of any phoneme by modeling it –– a process he called the stimulation method.  However, in that same paragraph, the great therapist said that objects must be employed when ear training alone fails.  He wrote, “…when the stimulation method fails, they [objects] must be used” (1947, p. 186).  Van Riper insisted that using objects was a valuable method of teaching phonemes.  He said that these items don’t need to be used when the client succeeds with auditory methods alone, but that objects must be employed when simple model-and-imitate methods are not enough.

Early Tools

When early editions of Van Riper’s book were published, phonetic placement devices were constructed of the only materials available at the time including wood, cotton, feathers, metal, glass (mirrors), paper, cardboard, cloth, rubber, leather, and other natural substances.  Van Riper’s referenced Scripture (1912) for these methods, for Scripture was the first to write about them in the United States.  Scripture described how to use tongue depressors, tooth props, handkerchiefs, rubber hoses, rubber wedges, rubber bulbs, “breath indicators,” metal rods, feathers, tissue paper, toothpicks, pencils, “probes,” “applicators,” “a bent laryngeal electrode,” and a “velar hook made of a rubber pen holder.”  He even used a Bunsen burner to teach clients about airflow (Scripture, 1912, p. 122–172).

In 1925, Borden and Busse published a book of phonetic placement techniques that also was highly recommended by Van Riper.  These New York University Speech Clinic professors discussed a number of probes they called “mechanical intervention and stimulations” (Borden and Busse, 1925, p. 159).  These instruments were constructed of wires, metal plates, wood, and rubber, and were designed to teach the client how to place the lips and tongue for phoneme productions.  Their tools were named as follows ––

  • Fricator: A flat metal plate on a handle used to hold the blade of the tongue down.
  • Fraenum Fork: A forked metal brace used to push the tongue into position.
  • S-Concentrator: A thin, hard rubber tube (like a bent straw) used to achieve midline frication.
  • Ladator: An odd-shaped tool used to hold the lips out of the way.
  • Ruvator: A flat metal plate on a handle used to hold the back of the tongue down.
  • Bent metal tongue depressor: A bent metal object that looked like today’s laryngeal mirror that was used to inhibit tongue’s “tendency to bunch up.”
  • Ordinary wooden applicator: A thin wooden stick used to create a narrow central groove of the tongue.

The tradition of using objects in articulation therapy originally came to the U.S. from Europe.  An article published in France in 1965 described a series of tools, called guide-langue, that were being used for speech correction at the time (Borel-Maisonny, 1965).  These were a set of 24 metal tools that were constructed like laryngeal mirrors, first made of metal and later plastic.  Each was comprised of a long thin handle with a shape on the end.  The shapes were of balls and paddles of various sizes, shapes and widths.  The tools were designed to teach jaw, lip, and tongue placement for all phonemes.  The Borel-Maisonny article contains schematic illustrations depicting how to use them to teach phonetic placement.  Borden reminded us of these tools in 1984 ––

“Speech pathologists in France, called orthophonists, carry around with them a tool kit with all sorts and shapes of oral probes for pushing the tongue around and for increasing awareness of tactile sensation in the mouth”  (Borden, 1984, p. 57).

In my thirty years of travel across the US and Canada to teach continuing education courses, I have met scores of international speech-language professionals––therapists from Poland, Germany, France, England, Russia, Brazil, Romania, the Czech Republic, and many other countries.  These professionals invariably approach me during breaks to explain that they were taught phonetic placement methods by using tools back in their home country.  They are confused as to why SLP’s in the United States are not trained in these basic methods today.

Today in the USA

The use of tools in articulation therapy today often gets lumped under the broad heading oral-motor techniques because they are used to guide oral (jaw, lip, tongue, velum) movements or positions for phoneme production.  The term oral-motor simple means “mouth movement.”  Modern textbooks that limit their discussion to only those methods that have been studied under the rigorous standards of today’s research methods have banned these ideas from their pages, or they mention them with obvious skepticism.  But old textbooks on articulation therapy are filled with them, and the methods survive in books with the term oral-motor in their title.  Prominent among these are Oral-Motor Techniques in Articulation and Phonological Therapy (Marshalla, 1992), and Oral-Motor Techniques for Speech Clarity (Rosenfeld-Johnson, 2001).

Many of the old-time phonetic placement methods also have survived in a several books designed to preserve them.  Prominent among these are Eliciting Sounds: Techniques and Strategies for Clinicians (Secord et al, 2007), Sound Strategies for Sound Production (Gilbert and Swiney, 2007), and The Late Eight (Bleile, 2006).

Today’s Tools

The introduction of plastic and vinyl to the production of household objects has caused a virtual explosion in the number of items that might be utilized today for stimulating the movements and positions necessary for phonetic placement.  The SLP practicing in the 21st century can chose from hundreds of items in order to follow Van Riper’s early directive to use every available device with clients who do not imitate phonemes well.  In essence, we now have tools to teach almost all aspects of respiration, phonation, resonation, and articulation control, from producing voice for a basic vowel, to elevating the back lateral margins of the tongue for an /r/.

Everyday objects are being used in this endeavor.  These include dental floss holders, tongue cleaners, kazoos, baby chew toys, tooth brushes, horns, bubble wands, lip retractors, lip gloss, dental wax, plastic straws, coffee stirrers, whistles, gummy bears, licorice whips, toy harmonicas, eyedroppers, laryngeal mirrors, and many other items.

Professional tools designed to stimulate specific oral movements in speech and feeding have and are being developed as well.  These include, for example, Chewy-Tube®, LifteR®, Toothette®, SpeechBuddies®, Ark Probe®, LipGym®, Jaw Grading Bite Blocks®, and the Z-Vibe®. The old See-Scape® and TalkBack® tools also fit in this category.  And of course, the tongue depressor probably is the most widely used professional tool of them all.

I believe that old-time practitioners who wrote the traditional books would have been thrilled to have the cornucopia of today’s objects available for phonetic placement.  They, like us, were creative and devoted people who would do just about anything to help their clients learn to produce better speech sounds.  It is perhaps unfortunate that some of these procedures have come to be called oral-motor techniques because the new term has caused much confusion and heartache within the profession.  These procedures were never intended to replace traditional articulation therapy methods, as some have assumed, nor were they intended to compete with methods of phonological therapy.  Modern SLP’s, who use a wide variety of toys and tools in their practice, simply have taken the old phonetic placement methods to new heights.  They are using new tools to accomplish old goals devised many years ago for phonetic placement.

Are These Non-Speech Oral-Motor Exercises?

Every writer of the phonetic placement methods, of oral motor techniques, has discussed the use of these toys and tools within the context of a complete articulation therapy program. Compare these quotes from Van Riper, Marshalla, and Rosenfeld-Johnson ––

  • 1958:  “The therapist…is attempting to give the case the appropriate location and formation.  As soon as this has been achieved, the therapist stimulates the case with the correct sound”  (Van Riper, 1958, p. 147).
  • 1992:  “One does not eliminate other aspects of a client’s articulation or phonological program in favor of doing oral-motor therapy alone. One utilizes oral-motor techniques as one engages in a program of articulation and phonological treatment”  (Marshalla, 1992, p. 16).
  • 2001:  “It is a tactile teaching technique which supplements traditional therapy… Please remember that the exercises in this manual do not replace anything you are using now”  (Rosenfeld-Johnson, 2001, p. 1).

The application of tools and toys in articulation therapy today is NOT a process of using “non-speech oral-motor exercises” as has been accused of late (e.g., Powell, 2008; Ruscello, 2008; Lof, 2008; Lof and Watson, 2008; Lass and Pannbacker, 2008).  There is nothing “non-speech” about them.  These methods are expanded descriptions of articulation techniques that have been around for hundreds of years.  These arethe traditional methods.

Unfortunately, when phonology entered the field in 1968 (Chomsky and Halle, 1968; Jacobson, 1968), our focus was turned to distinctive features, and then to phonological processes, and many of the old methods of phonetic placement were ignored as a result.  There even was much discussion that we did not even need the old methods any more.  But the problems of phonetic placement did not go away.  We still had kids with lateral lisps, frontal lisps, and distorted /r/.  We still had kids who could not lift the back of the tongue to produce /k/ and /g/, who could not lift the sides of the tongue for the sibilants’ groove, who could not press their lips together for /p/ and /b/, who could not lift the velum to produce an oral sound, and so forth.  Therapists continued to search for ways to get cooperative movement from the jaw, lips, tongue, and velum in order to achieve their speech targets.

Ideas to facilitate better oral movement for speech and feeding were being described as oral motor techniques in the late 1970’s.  Therapists, like myself, who were combining ideas about articulation, phonology, feeding, dysphagia, orofacial myology, motor speech disorders, neurodevelopmental treatment, and sensorimotor integration, began to teach others how to utilize these methods.  The old phonetic placement methods had been elevated to a new vista that combined articulation with many decades worth of new information about postural reflexes, muscle tone, gradation of movement, stability and mobility, flexion and extension, and other concepts borrowed from motor therapists.  A new perspective of speech movement had emerged and it was called oral-motor.  It was a combination of old ideas about phonetic placement with new ideas about movement itself.

As in all things, the more an idea is spread, the thinner the concept becomes.  By the 1990’s, some speech-language professionals had begun to substitute blowing horns and wagging the tongue for traditional articulation procedures.  This was an error.  One cannot replace good old-fashioned ideas about teaching phonemes or phonological patterns with wagging the tongue or blowing whistles.  Why this error began to occur, I cannot say for certain.  My best guess has been that, for whatever reason, these therapists did not learn traditional articulation therapy well in the first place, and they knew almost nothing about the old phonetic placement methods.  Therefore, when exposed to the new ideas about oral motor techniques, they thought that this was all that articulation therapy was.  But that is an incorrect view.  Oral-motor techniques get the mouth to move better, but they do not substitute for broader ideas about phoneme stimulation.  They are techniques that are used within a program of articulation therapy.  They are used for phonetic placement as well as to help prepare the oral mechanism for the movements necessary for phoneme production.

Despite the lack of university support, countless thousands of SLPs practicing in the North America use certain tools in the training of speech today.  Evidence that these objects are being used widely comes from product catalogues that teem with these items.  These toys and tools are being used despite the fact that very few of them have undergone the rigors of laboratory research considered so important today.  Tremendous controversy on the subject exists as a result.  Researchers cry out for restrictions in the use of such methods while practicing clinicians use what is available to them as always.  Practicing clinicians cannot wait for the research to come in.  They must act in practical and logical ways every day, just as they always have.  Using toys and other objects in therapy is part of the creative process of articulation therapy that was recommended by Van Riper and the other traditional masters ––

There are no doubt almost as many ways of carrying out these basic principles as there are clinicians” (Van Riper and Irwin, 1958, p. 118).

References

  • Bleile, K. (2006) The Late Eight. San Diego: Plural.
  • Borden, G. (1984) Consideration of motor sensory targets and a problem in perception. In Treating Articulation Disorders: For Clinicians by Clinicians. Winitz, H. (Ed.) pp. 51-66. Baltimore: University Park Press.
  • Borden, R. C., & Busse, A. C. (1925) Speech Correction. New York: Crofts.
  • Borel-Maisonny, S. (1965) Correction des erreurs motrices de la parole. Reeducaticu Orthophonique, No. 10.
  • Bosley, E. C. (1981) Techniques for Articulatory Disorders. Springfield: Charles C. Thomas.
  • Chomsky, N., & Halle, M. (1968) The Sound Pattern of English. NY: Harper & Row.
  • Gilbert, D. W., & Swiney, K. A. (2007) Sound Strategies for Sound Production. Austin: Pro-Ed.
  • Jacobson, R. (1968) Child Language Aphasia and Phonological Universals. The Hague: Mouton.
  • Lass, N. J., & Pannbacker, M. (2008) The application of evidence-based practice to nonspeech oral motor treatments Language, Speech and Hearing Services in the Schools, 39, p. 408-421.
  • Lof, G. L. (2008) Controversies surrounding nonspeech oral motor exercises for childhood speech disorders. Seminars in Speech and Language 29, 4, p. 253-255.
  • Lof, G. L., & Watson, M. M. (2008) A nationwide survey of nonspeech oral motor exercise use: Implications for evidence-based practice.  Language, Speech, and Hearing Services in the Schools, 29, 4, p. 392–407.
  • Marshalla, P. (Unpublished manuscript) The Marshalla Guide to 21st Century Articulation Therapy. Mill Creek, WA: MSL.
  • Marshalla, P. (1992) Oral-Motor Techniques in Articulation and Phonological Therapy. Mill Creek: Marshalla Speech and Language.
  • Powell, T. W. (2008) “The use of nonspeech oral motor treatments for developmental speech sound production disorders: Interventions and interactions.” Language, Speech and Hearing Services in the Schools, 39, p. 374-379.
  • Rosenfeld-Johnson, S. (2001) Oral-Motor Exercises for Speech Clarity. Tucson: Talk Tools.
  • Ruscello, D. M. (2008) An Examination of Nonspeech Oral Motor Exercises for Children with Velopharyngeal Inadequacy. Seminars in Speech and Language 29, 4, p. 294-303.
  • Scripture, E. W. (1912) Stuttering and Lisping. NY: Macmillan.
  • Secord, W. A., & Boyce, S., & Donohue, J., & Fox, R., & Shine, R. (2007) Eliciting Sounds: Techniques and Strategies for Clinicians. NY: Thomson Delmar Learning.
  • Van Riper, C. (1958, 1954, 1947) Speech Correction: Principles and Methods. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.
  • Van Riper, C. & Irwin, J. (1958) Voice and Articulation. Englewood Cliffs: Prentice-Hall.

 

Posted in Articulation, Oral Motor, Oral Motor Controversy.

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Phonological Policies

Q: My school district has been suggesting that we work on stopping before s-clusters, and I thought that would be a mistake leading to lots of frustration for both the SLPs and the students. Do you have any comments?

I think that whenever we set policy –– “my district has been suggesting that we work on stopping before s-clusters” –– we are forgetting the individual child.

There is no hierarchy or policy that should “work.”  What “works” is what works for that individual child, not what “should work” for everyone.  For example ––

  • One child will learn clusters before singletons, and another will learn singletons before clusters.
  • One child will learn a postvocalic S before a prevocalic S, and another will do it in the reverse.
  • One child will learn all his [+Anterior] sounds first and have great difficulty with the [+Back] sounds, while another child will get all his [+Back] sounds right away yet have tremendous difficulty gaining the [+Anterior] sounds.

It is not a curriculum we are teaching.  We are designing individualized programs that work for individual children. What does the term “IEP” mean?  It means Individualized Educational Plan.

To set a policy for approaching phonological skills means to ignore the important concepts of stimulability, readiness, and trial-and-error.  It also means to ignore who we really are –– we are people who help others in the ways that they can be helped.  We are not people who shove pre-set curriculums down our students’ throats.

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When “Ate” sounds like “Hate”

Q: When my 4-year-old client says a word that begins with a vowel, he adds /h/ before it –– “Ate” sounds like “Hate.” What are your thoughts?

Let me answer this according to four different scenarios ––

1.  Client generally uses no frication at all:  If the client was not yet using any fricatives or affricates, and the extra appearances of H were just a fluke, then I would stimulate all eleven sounds for a while till the whole set starts coming in –– Th, Th, F, V, S, Z, Sh, Zh, Ch, J, H.  Then I would worry about that extra H.

2.  Client has started acquiring frication and is overgeneralizing:  I may not bother to address this problem just now because the client simply may be in the process of acquiring frication, he is overgeneralizing, and he is doing so with H.  He is putting H where it doesn’t belong, and that’s okay for now because he needs to.  If this were the case, I would work on a lot of words that started with H so he could over-work it for a while –– He, him, his, hers, hot, hold, happy, hat, hit, home, home run, Harry, Harvey, hippo, etc.

3.  Client has all his fricatives and affricates:  If all the fricatives and affricates were in, or mostly in, and this truly was a simple problem of adding an extra H, I would use minimal pair words to teach him to hear, see, feel, and comprehend the difference between words with and without initial H.  For example, I might use ––

Heat –– Eat
Hit –– It
Hate ­­–– Ate
Head –– Ed
Hat –– At
Hoops –– Oops
Hone –– Own
Haul –– All
Hum –– Um
Who –– Oo

4. This is true prevocalic devoicing:  If the client truly could not turn his voice on as he initiated words, and he had to start a vowel with his voice off, I would teach him more about his voice.  I would teach him to turn it off and on at will by combining amplification and palpation of the neck (feel the vibration in the vocal folds with the hands).  Then I would teach him that he has to turn it on when he says a vowel.  I would have him practice whispered vowels and voiced vowels, back and forth, so he can hear and feel the differences.  Then I might go on to whispered words versus voiced words.

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Emerging Lateral Lisp in 12-Month-Old

Q: I am an SLP and my 12-month-old daughter is developing a lateral lisp on her first words! Help!!!

I believe this to be one of the worst positions in which an SLP can find him- or herself.

We can teach midline sibilants to very young children, even toddlers, if we approach the acquisition of frication/stridency the way an infant does.  I would do these three things now ––

1. Teach her to make a lingua-labial raspberry.  Put the tongue between the lips and blow.  This should habituate midline airstream.  Don’t practice this sound if she stiffens her tongue and makes it think and hard along the midline, and if the sound comes out laterally.  Make it soft and floppy so the tongue stays loose.  This is gross midline airstream work.

2.  Teach her to spit.  I know you probably don’t want her spitting, but most little kids learn to spit before they ever learn specific fricatives.  Spitting is done with the two lips together (bi-labial spitting), and with the tongue-tip between the lips (lingua-labial spitting).  This also is gross midline airstream work.

3. Don’t try to teach her S just yet.  Instead, make sure she is making an excellent T with the airstream coming out the midline. Play with making T into a McDonald’s straw.  Hold the straw outside the front teeth at midline.  Blow the T through the straw into a bowl of milk or a cup of juice.  Or, better yet, take it away from the feeding experience and make it a bathtub play activity.

4. Choose a simple word that ends with T that she can acquire easily, like Eat, Out, or That.  Teach her to punch out that final T.  (Most toddlers turn final T into final TS, which then turns into final S.)

5. Make sure she is learning Long E (as in “Eat”).  The Long E position situates the back lateral margins of the tongue against the palate for the underpinnings of the midline airstream.  If she already can do E (which she probably can), teach her to pant through the E position. She will be making a midline airstream.  A few months down the road, teach her to round the lips while she makes this sound.  It should turn into Sh.  Practice saying “Shhh” to baby dolls, etc.

That’s all I would do for now, with special concentration on the first four.  The fifth item gets more to the sibilants themselves, and it is probably way too early for that now.

Remember: 

  • Be mom first and therapist a distant second.
  • Do this is ways that she doesn’t know anything is going on.
  • Don’t develop tension around speaking.  You don’t want to create dysfluencies.  Abandon all of it if tension begins to develop.
  • Also, remember that she still will be brilliant even if she doesn’t have 1000 words by age two years.  I know this is hard for an SLP, but hold back on the language stimulation a little.  Give her time for her articulation skills to catch up with her brain and her vocabulary.

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What Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) Really Means

This opinion paper was originally posted as a downloadable PDF on my website’s resources page. I am slowly formatting the articles over there for posting to this blog. This post was authored in mid- 2011. Download the original PDF here.

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What Evidence-Based Practice (EBP) Really Means

Q: It is surprising to me that you find it reasonable to pass on non-evidence based ideas. I don’t think this meets a best practice standard at all. I’m curious to know how you demonstrate efficacy this way.

The term “Evidence-Based Practice” has been bandied about and distorted. EBP does not mean that we only use methods that have been researched in a laboratory.

For example, have you ever used a mirror in therapy to help a client understand how to position the articulators for a speech sound? I hope so. Is there any evidence to support this idea? No. Does that mean that we can no longer use a mirror in therapy? I hope not.

In an Evidence-Based Practice, the SLP takes what has been demonstrated in laboratory research, and puts that together with what she has learned through direct clinical experience, and what the client needs/wants/prefers. Here are four sources of this idea:

1. According to ASHA, an evidence-based practice is one that integrated evidence from the LAB, from the CLINIC, and from the CLIENT himself. ASHA’s logo for the EBP is a triangle, with each side of the triangle representing one of these ideas. You can view this on the ASHA website and here, to the right.

2. Sacket et al, the original authors of the EBP, have stated in their textbook, “External clinical evidence [i.e., research] can inform, but can never replace, individual clinical expertise.” Evidence-Based Medicine: How to Practice and Teach EBM. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, p. 3-4). They insisted that laboratory evidence alone can never dominate ones decisions about therapy. [Sacket, D., & Richardson, W.S., & Rosenberg, W., & Haynes, R.B. (1997) Evidence-Based Medicine: How to Practice and Teach EBM. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, p. 3-4]

3. Laura Justice, editor of the American Journal of Speech Language Pathology, contrasts EBP with “empirically validated treatments” (a treatment that has been validated by empirical research). She wrote: “…one’s use of an empirically validated treatment is not the same as engaging in EBP” (p. 324). Using EBP, the clinician “systematically gathers and integrates information (i.e., evidence) from a variety of resources, including scientific evidence [LAB], prior knowledge [CLINIC], and client preferences [CLIENT], to arrive at a decision” (p. 324). [Justice, Laura (2008) “Evidence-Based Terminology” Laura, Editor, AJSLP, 17, 4, November 2008]

4. Carol Dollaghan says that and EBP is the conscientious, explicit, and judicious integration of best available: External evidence from systematic research (LAB), Internal evidence from clinical practice (CLINIC), Evidence concerning the preferences of a fully-informed patient (CLIENT). [Dollaghan, C. A. (2007) The handbook for evidence-based practice in communication disorders. Baltimore: Brook.

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Stopping Stopping (Organizing the “Hissing Sounds”)

Q: In my therapy with kids who have the stopping process, I typically start with S-clusters and S in the postvocalic position.  It seems they develop the idea of “fricative-ness” more easily this way and, from there, they more easily go on to prevocalic S.  I find that starting with prevocalic S often leads to a lot of frustration because they learn “sock” as “stock,” and so forth. Can you comment on this?

First, we have such a mess in dividing sounds into groups called fricatives, affricates, stridents, and sibilants.  What confusion.  I propose that we call Th, Th, F, V, S, Z, Sh, Zh, Ch, J, and H with only one term –– “The Hissing Sounds.”

So let’s talk about stimulating the Hissing Sounds when they are absent.

My experience is exactly the same as yours. The Hissing Sounds come in much more easily at the ends of words ––

  • I usually begin with word final Ts –– Hats, cats, lights, boats
  • Then I move on to postvocalic voiceless Th, F, S, Sh, CH –– Bath, Off, Bus, Fish, Ouch
  • Then I move on to postvocalic S-Clusters with P and K –– Books, Cups…
  • Then I go on to word-initial position S-Clusters with Sp, st, sk, sm, sm, sl, sw –– Spoon, star, skate, smoke, snake, sweater, slide
  • Then I go to the prevocalic sounds Th, F, S, SH, CH, H –– Think, Four, Sock, Shoe, Choo-choo, Hot

But of course this is just a plan in my head. I always probe for stimulability and go with what the client shows me he/she is ready for. So that means sometimes I abandon the whole thing and just work on H… or Sh… or Ch… or F… of S… in whatever position is working for the client.

FYI, I began to reorganize my presentation of these phonemes in this way after having read Smith (1973). This book is a detailed month-by-month analysis of one child’s developing phonological system.  Smith studied his own son and found that stridency emerged first at the end of words, particularly after he had learned final T.  I began to apply this idea to my clients and found it to be a much better approach than introducing hissing at the beginnings of words first.

Also, I heard Barbara Hodson speak in 2006, and she said the same thing.  She said that if a child cannot get initial S, we should abandon it, go to final S-clusters, and then to final S. And eventually we should return to initial S.

References

  • Hodson, B. W. (2006) Enhancing Phonological Skills and Metaphonological Skills of Children with Highly Unintelligible Speech. Seminar Handbook. Bellevue, WA: Belay Learning. March 17.
  • Smith, N. V. (1973) The Acquisition of Phonology: A Case Study. London: Cambridge.

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Prioritizing the Frontal Lisp and Cluster Reduction

Q: My client is beginning to use S-blends, but she does so with an interdental lisp. Do I treat the phonological process first and let her lisp, or treat the lisp first and then the process? Or should I do both concurrently?  I am worried about reinforcing the lisp.

I would work on the phonology first to stimulate the use of the phoneme within the language.  Then I would address place of articulation.  That’s the way I would organize it in my head, at least, because that’s the way it evolves in normal development.  For example, it is very common for a two-year-old to develop plural (Hats, cats…) with interdental tongue placement on S. The child gets the phonological pattern first, and then she sorts out place of articulation.

Having said that, I would be stimulating normal oral stability all the way along, but I will not describe that process here.  That way, as the S emerges, it will be produced in a stabile way –– with the jaw high and the tongue in.

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Need for Differential Diagnosis

Q: I have a six-year-old male client that has phonological and articulation problems. What should I target first in therapy?

Therapy always is based on the differential diagnosis.  It is impossible to answer that question without information about the client’s entire phonological and articulation repertoire. Selection of therapy targets will be very different depending upon many factors.

One makes decisions about therapy based upon a complete overview of what is going on.  If you read through this blog, you will see that I have answered many questions about how to stimulate this or that phoneme or phonological.  However I have never answered a question that stated, “My client has a problem with speech, what should I do?”  The question is far too broad and far too void of basic information that can help you make these kinds of decisions.

To make decisions about where to start in therapy one has to have information in at least the following areas. This is the core of the differential diagnosis for an expressive speech disorder, in my opinion ––

Cognition

The client’s cognitive status, IQ, or cognitive age equivalency.

Receptive Language

The client’s receptive language level, vocabulary age, ability to follow directions, ability to answer questions.

Expressive Language Level

The client’s expressive language level. Non-verbal? Babbling? One-word level? Two-word level? Etc.

Hearing

The status of the hearing mechanism.

Oral Structure

The status of oral structure.

Oral Function

What is the status of oral (jaw, lip, tongue, velum) control?

Phonology

A complete inventory of phonological patterns.

Distinctive Features

An accounting of the distinctive features the client does and does not use.

Consonants

A complete inventory of all the consonants that the client does and does not use.

Vowels

A complete inventory of all the vowels the client does and does not use.

Diphthongs

A complete inventory of the diphthongs she does and does not use.

Voice, Resonance, Prosody, and Fluency

A simple accounting of each area.

Feeding

My analysis always includes an assessment of feeding skills as well, however I realize that this is not taught as a standard of practice.

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Sliding Jaw on /R/

Q: I have an elementary client who figured out how to say R all by herself, but she shifts her jaw to one side to accomplish it. I have tried to get her to stop lateralizing the jaw, but then she can’t produce R. Should I worry about this?

I would not try to take her away from what she has achieved on her own. She is proud of it!

Instead, let her keep producing the R with the jaw lateralization for now. Stabilize the acoustic quality like this for weeks/months.  Then, down the road and when you feel that the time is right, have her look in the mirror and decide for herself if she wants to speak with her jaw sliding to the side for the rest of her life.

The Effect of this Problem

There is a political talk guy on cable news who does this –– Dick Morris.  He slides his jaw to the left on every R he makes.  It is soooooo distracting and takes away from his message.  It is not “wrong” per se, because the acoustic quality of R is there, but the elocutionists never would have stood for it.  You might have your client watch this fellow online.  He is everywhere on YouTube.

Minor visual elements like this are very distracting to the listener.  An SLP can see what the person is doing wrong.  But the average person simply thinks that the speaker talks funny and therefore must not be very smart.

A Message to Celebrities

By the way, if you are Dick Morris and are reading this, CONTACT ME!  I can help you with this.  You are far too smart of a guy to be burdened with this minor speech error.

And the rest of you celebrities with minor but very distracting speech errors… You know who you are… CALL ME!

And all you young female actresses in films, television, and commercials who are speaking with that awful GLOTTAL FRY…   STOP IT!  It’s not cute or sexy.  You are ruining your voice.  You will have very little voice left by the time you are in your fifties.  You depend on your voice for your livelihood, for goodness sakes.

Get thee to a voice specialist!   Many excellent speech-language pathologists and vocal coaches can help you find your real voice so you can speak like the grown intelligent women that you are.

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Verbal, Augmentative, and Cognition

Q: My four-year-old client is essentially non-verbal. He can say “momma.” He also babbles a little and says a few vowels. I am a first-year therapist and don’t really know how far he can go. And I don’t know what to tell the parents.

We all start out as you are by making guesses from the seat of our pants.

There is no way to know where this client will go at this point.  What I know and what I tell parents: Time will tell.  Perhaps he will fix all this up and be just fine, but perhaps not.  It is his response to therapy that determines how well he will do.

Now, having said that, we must face the fact that he is nonverbal and already four years of age.  That is not a good sign.  My guess is that he is facing a lifetime of speech-language problems.

The best you can do is to try to get a handle on his cognitive skills. His cognitive skills will help determine his future.  If he thinks like a four-year-old, then his potential is much better than if he thinks like a toddler or an infant.  Have the members of his team join information together in order to pinpoint his cognitive age equivalency.  Teach the parents and the team the following: He only can speak as well as he thinks.  Your goal will be to get him to speak as well as he thinks.

In the meantime, I would hit him with every way of stimulating communication that I could.  Use sounds, words, gestures, signs, pictures, objects, and computers.

A child like this often needs multiple means of communication.  Maybe he will say “mamma,” sign “potty,” nod his head to mean “yes,” pick up his cup to request “juice,” and use the computer to name pictures.  None of these should interfere with the others as long as you keep all channels of communication means open.

Posted in Apraxia and Dysarthria.

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Chinese /r/ and /l/ Problems

Q: I have an adult Chinese student with /r/ and /l/ problems. She produces these phonemes with additional sounds I cannot describe in words. Can you give me any tips in correcting them?

I think your best method for correcting this would be to have her say the sounds enough times that you will be able to imitate them exactly.  Then model for her what she is doing and help her hear what she is doing wrong.  And then help her figure out how not to do it correctly.  This is ear training at its finest.  Figure out what she is doing with your own mouth first, then teach her to change hers.

I usually tell older clients that this is exactly what I am doing. I say, “I need to figure out exactly what you are doing.  I am going to have you say it several times, and I am going to try to say it just like you.  That way I can figure out what you are doing wrong.”  Then I have the client say their sound as many times as necessary for me to get it a clear auditory image of it.  I may be able to imitate on the spot.  But I often figure out how to do what they are doing by practicing at home while soaking in long hot baths.

Alexander Graham Bell was perhaps the first to advocate this method –

“The first step in the correction of a defect is to understand the mechanism of the defective sound… How are you to investigate it?  Imitate the defective sound yourself, and then study your own vocal organs” (Bell, 1906, p. 85).

Reference

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Long Distance R Therapy

Q: My adult daughter needs help with her R. Is this something you can do with her by way of this Blog?

Therapy to remediate an incorrect R is like voice training: It cannot be done on paper or in a QA format like this.  Your daughter needs to find a live therapist with whom she can work, either together in an office or via live on-line video chatting.  Either should work okay if the therapist knows what he/she is doing to fix R.

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Inappropriate Prolongation of R

Q: My student can do R in all words and in all positions, but he prolongs it. Do I need to teach him NOT to do this?

I would teach it to him if it did not go away by itself within a reasonable period of time.  I am not sure what that reasonable period of time is, but I would be willing to give him 6 months to a year to straighten this out.

I probably would give him a few lessons on this and then let him go with periodic checks every few months.  Use negative practice in these lessons, and have him compare long and short productions.  Make a long one, and then a one short, and go back and forth between the two.  This is ear training.  Teach him a simple rule, “We make R short like all other sounds.”

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How to Teach Proper Oral-Nasal Resonance Balance

This opinion paper was originally posted as a downloadable PDF on my website’s resources page. I am slowly formatting the articles over there for posting to this blog. This post was authored in mid- 2011. Download the original PDF here.

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How to Teach Proper Oral-Nasal Resonance Balance

I receive weekly questions from therapists struggling with how to decrease hypernasality in clients who have adequate velo-pharyngeal structure.

I am not an expert in this area, but I would like to share what I do to help clients become less nasal. These clients generally can achieve oral sound, but they become hypernasal in connected speech.

There is no “oral-motor” work that needs to be done. The client already can lift the velum to make oral sound, and he already can lower the velum to make nasal sound. He just doesn’t control these movements at the right times.

This is refined ear training. These clients have to learn to hear when they are making sound orally, and when they are making is nasally. And they have to learn to control this process.

Procedure

Use a flexible tube about 1-foot in length. Have the client stretch it from his nose to his ear, so he can hear when he is making nasal sound. And have him stretch it from his mouth to his ear, so he can hear when he is making oral sound

Pam does the following over time. She made this up by thinking through the process logically. Since then, she has read about other therapists who do generally the same thing––

  1. Start with having the client EXPERIENCING vowels and nasals (listen to V’s & nasals). Help him discover that vowels come out the mouth while nasals come out the nose. Say, “That sound is coming out your nose.” And “That sound is coming out your mouth.”
  2. Help the client learn to DIFFERENTIALLY CONTROL vowels and nasals. Have them listen to themselves produce vowels and nasals with the tube. These clients already can do this. You are teaching them to listen to themselves so they can HEAR themselves do it.
  3. Help the client learn to DISCRIMINATE oral and nasal sound. Ask, “Did that sound come out the mouth or the nose?”
  4. Have the client make SIMPLE WORDS that are completely oral, and help learn to hear that they are completely oral. For example, have him say, hi, out, up, yuck… and have him monitor the nasality throughout.
  5. Help the client learn to make SIMPLE WORDS that are sequenced oral-to- nasal and learn to hear the sequence, or the shift, from oral to nasal. For example, on, in, an, I’m… (monitor the sequencing).
  6. Learn to make SIMPLE WORDS that are sequenced nasal-to-oral, and help the client learn to hear the sequence, or the shift, from nasal to oral. For example, practice me, my, ma, no, nay….
  7. Help the client advance to more difficult work from there. Move on to multi- syllabic words, words with two or more nasal sounds, phrases, sentences, and conversation.

Posted in Articulation.

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Carryover Techniques for Speech-Language Therapy

This opinion paper was originally posted as a downloadable PDF on my website’s resources page. I am slowly formatting the articles over there for posting to this blog. This post was authored in mid- 2011. Download the original PDF here.

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Carryover Techniques

The term carryover refers to a client’s ability to take an individual speech skill learned in the therapy room and to apply it broadly in all speaking situations.

The following is an outline of the techniques presented in:

Marshalla, P. (2010) Carryover Techniques in Articulation and Phonological Therapy. Mill Creek, WA: Marshalla Speech and Language. www.pammarshalla.com

Managing the Process

Carryover may be in jeopardy when work and play are not balanced in articulation therapy. Carryover should be built into the very fabric of a therapy program right from the very first day of treatment. These and many other ideas help us manage the carryover process:

  1. Contracts can be made with adolescents who are considered for articulation therapy.
  2. SLP’s control the phonetic environment of practice material to better assure carryover.
  3. The frequency of therapy often plays into the carryover process, however, this is a subject of considerable debate.
  4. Articulation therapy entails various aspects of functionality that together carry the client toward carryover.
  5. Parents, caregivers, peers, teachers, and teacher aids can help in the carryover process, but it is a mistake to assume that they always can help. Some of these people are helpful right away, some can be taught to be helpful over time, and others simply should be kept out of the process all together.
  6. A critical aspect of the carryover process is patience. Charles Van Riper warned that we should not rush the carryover process.
  7. Many therapists review work at the beginning, end, and throughout each session in order to stimulate carryover.
  8. It has been recommended that carryover is complete only when the client can use his new speech skill in conversation both inside and outside of the therapy room.
  9. Children with lower cognitive skills must be taught very specific skills under very specific circumstances because they do not generalize well.

Self-Monitoring for Carryover

Self-monitoring has been discussed widely in books on traditional articulation therapy and is regularly mentioned as one of the most important aspects of carryover. The following suggestions have been made through the years.

  1. A critical component of self-monitoring is auditory discrimination of one’s own correct and incorrect productions. This auditory self-discrimination is encouraged by asking clients to judge their own performances.
  2. Self-monitoring of speech for carryover also involves a conscious awareness of what is going on in therapy.
  3. Van Riper wrote about the use of checking devices for building self- monitoring of speech productions (Van Riper, (1947, p. 203). Checking devices are used by clients to record the number of errors they makes during a certain time or activity.
  4. Clients can build self-awareness of their own productions by correcting the therapist.
  5. Helping a client think through his own personal dreams and aspirations can be a powerful tool in the process of building self-awareness and carryover.
  6. Children can come to greater self-awareness of their own speech when they demonstrate their newly learned skills to others.
  7. Periodic distractions during therapy routines can be effective in stimulating self-monitoring for carryover.
  8. A client’s exaggeration of his own error also can be an especially good procedure to engage the process of self-monitoring for carryover.
  9. Charting often is used in therapy to help clients develop self-discrimination outside of therapy.
  10. Some clients do not carryover new skills because they cannot visualize that there will be an end to treatment. Listing the clients hardest words can be a way to help them see the final product.
  11. Imitating the client’s error is a powerful method of forcing a client to examination his own productions.
  12. Van Riper recommended using key words to promote carryover. He also recommended using nucleus situation (Van Riper, 1947, p. 204). This means to correct the child only when he is in a certain place or setting at home.
  13. Carryover is assisted when children are trained in a preparatory mindset (Bosley, 1981, p. 122). For example, set a rule about good speech––“As soon as you leave my room, you are to speak correctly, using your new sound.”
  14. Posing questions to clients about their progress can be an effective tool to stimulate self-awareness for carryover. For example: How is this speech work going for you?
  15. Audio, video, and computer recordings to promote both auditory and visual self-awareness for carryover.
  16. Self-awareness for carryover can be enhanced when reminders are used at home and at school.
  17. An excellent way to build a client’s self-evaluation skills is to develop a cue he will use to remind himself to use his new speech skill outside of the therapy room.
  18. Van Riper suggested the use of what he called simultaneous tasks to promote self-monitoring for carryover. The idea is to work on speech and do other simple activities at the same time.
  19. Van Riper recommended speech assignments to promote self-awareness for carryover (e.g., 1958, p. 257). Speech assignments are simple tasks assigned to the client during which he will use his new speech production skills outside of the therapy room.

Speech Production Activities for Carryover

A significant part of facilitating carryover has to do with the way speech is practiced during therapy sessions. Most therapists hope that speech production activities alone will promote carryover, and this occurs often. Van Riper and many other authors have suggested a wide variety of speech production activities for the promotion of carryover. They include the following:

  1. Babbling to promote automaticity of productions.
  2. Chanting to encourage memory and automaticity.
  3. Describing objects as a way to begin the process of spontaneous productions.
  4. Arguing or debating to promote spontaneous productions.
  5. Playing with an error sound or word to facilitate control.
  6. Fill-in sentences or fill-in stories to stimulate spontaneity.
  7. Idioms to stimulate spontaneity.
  8. Negative practice to help break the incorrect speech habit.
  9. Nonsense syllables and words to strengthen the carryover process.
  10. Overpractice to cause a hyper-awareness of the goals of therapy.
  11. Rapid-fire questions and answers to promote naturalness.
  12. Reading aloud as a step between word productions and conversational speech.
  13. Rhyming to capture a client’s attention and encourage practice outside of therapy.
  14. Riddles because they cause a client to combine practice material with creative thinking.
  15. Shortening productions to encourage naturalness.
  16. Singing to help children remember their speech work and to encourages effortless practice.
  17. Spelling out errors to help the client think about what he is saying and how he is saying it.
  18. Story telling and re-telling to cause stimulate spontaneity and to cause a breakthrough in carryover.
  19. Tongue twisters to teach children how to control their speech.

Personality, Emotion, and Attitude

Personality, emotion, and attitude play important roles in the carryover process. The following ideas are noteworthy:

  1. Clients must be helped to develop a positive attitude about therapy.
  2. Most clients need some level of encouragement to move into and through the carryover process.
  3. Carryover fails in some clients because they would rather keep an error that they think no one notices. Teach the clients that very few people will notice the change they make in their speech.
  4. Clients will have more success in carryover if they learn to plow ahead despite changing emotions about the process.
  5. Sometimes the best thing we can do for carryover is to take the pressure off.
  6. Carryover is more assured when we connect our work to the client’s present passions and pursuits.
  7. Rapport also is necessary to build carryover skill.
  8. Release of distress over speech errors can pave the way for successful carryover.
  9. Reverse psychology can be used as an effective method of bringing conscious control over speech skills in the process of building carryover.
  10. Some clients must be taught to change any self-talk that might be interfering with carryover.
  11. Some of our clients cannot carry their speech work home because the home is an unsettled place. SLP’s often simply have to teach clients to ignore what is happening at home and to focus on what they can accomplish with us in therapy.
  12. SLP’s can teach clients that they should not worry about what others think or say about their speech, and that they should plow through to victory despite negative remarks.
  13. Van Riper and Irwin (1958) taught that some clients do not achieve carryover until they can produce their new sounds under conditions of varying emotional stress.

Posted in Articulation, Other.

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Starting Position for Speech Movement

Q: I am working on my master’s thesis on a topic related to the basis of articulation and the neutral/starting positions. I would like to expand my research beyond the linguistics domain into the neighboring fields of speed physiology and therapy. I read your notes “The Roles of Oral Rest Posture and Neutral Position in Articulation” and would like to cite it. Have you published it anywhere? Perhaps you have mentioned starting position in your other publications?

I am currently writing a book I am calling “The Marshalla Guide to 21st Century Articulation Therapy” to be published in 2012-13.  It will have an entire chapter on the oral stability, oral rest, and the starting position for speech.

I wrote the paper you mentioned to satisfy the great number of questions I receive regularly about oral stability.  You can site that paper as coming from the website.

For your information, I just began using the term “starting position” in that paper. I think it’s a better term than anything else we have used before. All my other publications use the terms “jaw stability,” “oral stability” and “oral control.”

Pam’s References for this Concept

  • Frontal Lisp, Lateral Lisp”:  This book contains the most I have written so far about this topic.  I wrote about jaw and tongue instability in the frontal lisp in Chapter 3.  I also discuss it in relation to the lateral lisp in Chapter 4.  And I talk about methods to stabilize the jaw for the frontal lisp in Chapter 8.
  • Successful R Therapy”:   I talk about jaw instability related to misarticulations of /r/ in Chapter 2.
  • Oral-Motor Techniques in Articulation and Phonological Therapy”:  I have entire chapters on jaw and tongue movements in speech that discuss the role of oral stability.

Posted in Articulation, Oral Motor.

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Inappropriate Prolongation of R

Q: My student can do R in all words and in all positions, but he prolongs it. Do I need to teach him NOT to do this?

I would teach it to him if it did not go away by itself within a reasonable period of time.  I am not sure what that reasonable period of time is, but I would be willing to give him 6 months to a year to straighten this out.

I probably would give him a few lessons on this and then let him go with periodic checks every few months.  Use negative practice in these lessons, and have him compare long and short productions.  Make a long one, and then a one short, and go back and forth between the two.  This is ear training.  Teach him a simple rule, “We make R short like all other sounds.”

Posted in Articulation.

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