
The Case for Obscure Vocabulary
I work with lots of students on their articulation. Some have language needs as well, but many don’t (although, by in large, all my artic
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Parent education, home activities and homework for speech therapy

I work with lots of students on their articulation. Some have language needs as well, but many don’t (although, by in large, all my artic

My coffee table always has a slippery stack of glossy magazines. I love opening the mailbox and seeing any one of them there—cooking, travel, news,…or

Scissor activities in the speech room are an low prep, low mess way to create fun crafts. They’re particularly good for articulation students! Stick with

It’s back! Gabby from Middle School SLP and I are ready to match up some speech and language students in need of a buddy. Do

For me, one of the greatest joys of summer is indulging in books and magazines—something I don’t always have enough time for during the school

I’ve wrapped up my year–sessions and paperwork–and am now focused on my daughter’s high school graduation (gulp!) I will be seeing a handful of students

Social media is currently awash in memes of teachers/SLPs hanging by a thread in the hopes of making it to spring break. I sooooo get

It was 80 degrees this weekend. In February. In fact, the last month has had so many very warm days, all of the daffodils are

I left school Thursday and drove to Athens, GA to present at the GSHA convention on using apps in therapy on Friday morning, so this

Let’s see what was happening in my room this week! I have a couple of new fronters (using a t/k and d/g error pattern). This
I’ve had a number of recent Instagram posts receive questions like where I found the toys and lots of comments. My IG photos are a great place
When I was in first grade we went through a long recess streak of jump rope games. “Teddy bear, teddy bear, turn around” and “Cinderella,
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The views expressed in this blog are my own and are intended to inspire other speech-language pathologists in their own practice. If you are a parent, teacher or other educator, these ideas are not intended to take the place of treatment by a certified clinician. Read full disclaimer here.