Evaluations
An evaluation for your child can consist of a parent interview, review of provided documents such as audiograms or previous evaluations and goals, formal assessments, and informal observations through interactions and play. At your evaluation, your therapist will make recommendations for your child’s therapy and work with you to ensure the perfect Plan of Care for your child and your family.
Listening
Interpretation of audiograms and the result’s impact on your child’s listening skills and associated communication
Informal assessment of your child’s current listening skills through parent questionnaire and responses to sound
Use of Ling-Madell-Hewitt Test to understand your child’s detection and perception of sounds in the speech spectrum
Receptive and Expressive Language
Formal speech assessment of your child’s receptive and expressive language skills
Informal observations of your child’s language skills or areas of weakness
Any difficulty with play or social skills
Your child’s utterance length (MLU) and comprehension of directions
Articulation
Formal speech assessment of your child’s sound inventory
Informal observations of your child’s inventory and error patterns
Identification of level of complexity breakdowns occur (sound level, word level, phrase level, sentence level, conversation level)
Overall intelligibility
Oral Mechanism Exam
Fluency
Conversational assessment during play or reading activities
Assessment of the frequency, severity and types of dysfluencies your child exhibits
You may be asked to provide recordings of your child in their natural and most comfortable environment
Pediatric Speech and Language Therapy
Articulation and Phonology
Articulation or speech sound errors are incorrect productions of typically developing speech sounds
Phonological patterns can occur when a child “learns the rules of sound development incorrectly”. Instead of having a single sound in error, a child may incorrectly produce a group of sounds in the same category
Errors in speech sounds can impact your child’s ability to be understood or their “intelligibility”
Therapy may consist of a variety of treatment strategies to address your child’s sound errors or phonological patterns
Creation and implementation of personalized and functional goals to improve your child’s pronunciation and overall intelligibility
Receptive and Expressive Language
Expressive Language errors can look like your child struggling to use pronouns, mixing up tense, or using language that is deemed immature for their age
Receptive language errors may seem like your child can’t understand directions you give them, participate in appropriate play or comprehend conversations
Therapy may include ways to teach grammar concepts, comprehension of basic concepts and following directions
Creation and implementation of personalized and functional goals to improve your child’s language skills and ability to communicate with others
Fluency
Fluency errors can seem like your child repeats sounds, words or interjections over and over again
Sometimes children will get “stuck” and sounds or certain words won’t come out when they try to talk
Children may struggle to find words they want to use and may “talk around” words that feel difficult
Certain children may exhibit grimacing or facial twitching during stuttering moments
Therapy may consist of teaching strategies to help during a stuttering moment, parent coaching to provide constructive feedback and activities to help children feel like they can control dysfluencies
Sessions can be play-based, structured or a combination of the two in order to best address your child’s errors and the way they learn the best.
Auditory-Verbal Therapy/Listening and Spoken Language Therapy
Auditory-verbal therapy is a parent-coaching-based therapy structure that addresses your child’s specific hearing loss and their communication skill development
Therapy is considered “dynamic intervention” and includes parent feedback or concerns that may drive a session’s activities
The therapist will interact with the caregiver and patient to teach a variety of appropriate strategies and address specific patient goals
Sessions can be play-based, structured or a combination of the two in order to best address your child’s errors and the way they learn the best
Parent Coaching
Life is busy. Finding time to set up opportunities to practice communication skills at home can seem overwhelming! At Love to Listen Therapy, we are here to help.
Parent Coaching is a part of your skilled intervention session that targets ways to improve your confidence by using and incorporating learned strategies for communication skill development.
Your therapist will collaborate with you to identify personalized ways you can infuse these strategies into your daily routines to enhance your child’s communication progress.
Learn to feel confident being your child’s therapist. As your child’s personal expert, you are the best resource on their “team” and have a tremendous impact on their success in skill development. Let Love to Listen guide you in becoming the best interventionist for your child.
Virtual Services
Clinic- Based Services
Mentorship and Consulting
AG Bell Listening and Spoken Language Mentorship
Professional education for therapists
Love to Listen Therapy can provide professional education opportunities for those working with the Deaf and Hard-of-Hearing population.
Contact us today to discuss your education needs
ASHA/Texas Licensing CEUs pursued upon request for an additional fee
Speaking engagements
ASHA
TSHA
AG Bell
Parent Groups