But a collaborative team ? That’s a different story.
The answer is practice. Specifically, practicing the messy, real-world scenarios that don’t have a simple “test score” solution. Most communication disorder training focuses on identification (how to spot a stutter or a language delay) or therapy (what the SLP does in a pull-out session). But a collaborative team
Teachers, Special Educators, School Counselors, SLPs, Administrators Every day, students with communication disorders walk the halls of our schools. Some can’t find the words to ask for help. Others misunderstand social cues during lunch. Many sit silently in the back of the classroom, not because they don’t know the answer, but because they can’t retrieve the sounds fast enough. practicing the messy
But a collaborative team ? That’s a different story.
The answer is practice. Specifically, practicing the messy, real-world scenarios that don’t have a simple “test score” solution. Most communication disorder training focuses on identification (how to spot a stutter or a language delay) or therapy (what the SLP does in a pull-out session).
Teachers, Special Educators, School Counselors, SLPs, Administrators Every day, students with communication disorders walk the halls of our schools. Some can’t find the words to ask for help. Others misunderstand social cues during lunch. Many sit silently in the back of the classroom, not because they don’t know the answer, but because they can’t retrieve the sounds fast enough.