How to Navigate the world of CAS by Sue Caspari, CCC-SLP
- It takes 70 muscles (including 8 body parts) to utter a single syllable word!
- We can say 14 sounds in a single second..... like in the phrase "peanut butter cookies"!
- By the age of 2 - 3 years, most normal children have all the vowel sounds in English
- CAS is the breakdown in planning and programming of speech movements--where in space to move, when in time to move, and how fast to move
- It is a "discoordination disorder"
- Some things it is NOT: an intellectual deficit, incurable, or outgrown
- ASHA has a position statement on CAS, but there is a serious lack of well-controlled treatment addressing what interventions are most effective, this makes receiving proper diagnosis and treatment difficult ( I know this all too well! )
- What ASHA does recommend is 3-5 sessions of individual speech therapy a week
The Kaufman Speech to Language Protocol by Nancy Kaufman, CCC-SLP
Nancy Kaufman's presentation included a discussion of her materials (which I've talked a bit about in an earlier post). It was exciting to see her and her discussion of strategies to use for cueing. Many of which I want to use more of with Nate.
She talked about how you should always build on the child's repertoire and increase the words and syllables used. Functional words like (on, in, off, go, yes, no, help, etc.) are incredibly important as well as working towards what she calls "pivot phrases", such as: put on ______, help me ______, I want ______, or more ____. Nate's been working on some of these, but I can definitely see where he needs to work on more than just the few that he's been using. It's important not to just focus on nouns, but all of the parts of speech.
Cues she talked about:
- visual/tactile (signs, gestures, physical reminders)
- cognitive (explaining where to place lips or tongue...although there is some research to support that visual cues work better for apraxics than telling them what to do)
- oral posturing (forming the shapes of words with your own mouth, without voicing)
- contextual cues (fill in the blanks for songs, rhymes, books....she showed us this amazing video of a girl who could hardly speak, but could much more easily fill in the blanks in a song!)
- pivot syllables (practicing words with a syllable that is the same: bunny, money, Ernie, Winnie, etc.)
- giving the answer first and then asking the question (ex: Look at him riding his bike. What is he doing?) I particularly like this cue and plan on using it more as it gives a quick cue as to what words to use so Nate may be able to get his mouth coordinated a bit better.
- deletion of vowel in monosyllabic words (ex: for the word cup /cu/ /p/ instead of /c/ /up/)
- whisper cues (whisper the word)
I definitely want to use more cues, especially the giving the answer first and then asking questions. And finally I was reminded that its not enough to just say good or good job, it's important to give specific feedback.
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