Winamp Logo
Autism Outreach Cover
Autism Outreach Profile

Autism Outreach

English, Education, 1 season, 165 episodes, 3 days, 17 hours, 30 minutes
About
In the Autism Outreach Podcast, Speech Therapist and BCBA, Rose Griffin from ABA SPEECH, provides her best, ready to use autism interventions and speech therapy techniques to inspire professionals and parents working with students with autism. With 20 years of experience in the field, Rose understands one of the biggest challenges parents, therapists and educators face on a daily basis is helping students strengthen their communication skills. Listeners will regain a sense of calm as Rose breaks down trusted therapy techniques to try at home or school to provide support to students. Rose will address a variety of topics on autism spectrum disorder: how autism symptoms present in babies and toddlers, recognizing the differences between autism and a speech delay, early intervention therapies, autism evaluation, autism diagnosis, how to help a child with autism start communicating if they are nonverbal, helping students who engage in problem behavior, functional communication skills, increasing student engagement and improving social skills. An excellent listen for parents and professionals alike, with a mix of interviews and solo shows designed to inspire, empower, and provide you with confidence to help your students. Hit subscribe and learn more at www.abaspeech.org
Episode Artwork

#162: The AAC Trial Process with Brittany Schmidt

“We have to see learners as a part of their community.” Brittany Schmidt, BCBA-SLP, explains a major point of the AAC Trial process, having the device be effective across all of the learners' environments and communication partners. It’s hard to stay up to date and fully understand AAC when you’re not working with it on a regular basis. In this episode, Brittany shares some specific points and ideas when it comes to finding the right AAC device for a learner and avoiding device abandonment.Over the years, there has been an incredible evolution of access. There is more affordability and availability of devices and applications with unique features that can be programmed for diverse learners. Ease and functionality, response and consequence changing, power words, and realistic goal setting are among some of the great points Brittany and I discuss.You can find out more about Brittany through Thrive Clinical Solutions or reach out to her via email. Be on the lookout for her talk and CEUs on AAC through ABA Speech Connection.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Understanding the varying modes of intent to communicate, including problem behaviors.Helping learners communicate across environments and partners.The evolution of access to AAC.Unique app features that can help a variety of learners needs.Mentioned In This Episode:Thrive Clinical Solutionsschmidt@thriveclinicalsolutions.com ABA SPEECH Connection Membership
2/6/202441 minutes, 53 seconds
Episode Artwork

#161: Teaching Children to Respond To Questions About the Past with Stephanie Gonzalez

As a fellow busy SLP-BCBA, I know it's hard to keep up to date with research. That's why I’ve been combing through articles and inviting these researchers in our field on the podcast! I am on a mission to bridge the gap between research and practice. Stephanie Gonzalez is a BCBA doctoral candidate at the University of Florida and the author of the article, Teaching Children to Respond to Questions About the Past: A Preliminary Analysis. While her research into this topic is ongoing, Stephanie and I had a great conversation about recall skills and how some may not see them as an available skill for their learners. The work she has done shows how this skill can be worked on alongside other important targets.What did you do at school today? What did you do this weekend? What movie did you see? What toy did you play with? These are all valuable questions that recall the past and unlock conversations, especially for parents who want to know what their child is up to.Using probe fading, Stephanie gradually builds a delay in recall, using differential reinforcements every time a learner correctly recalls. In fact, with the learners she's worked with, she has surprisingly built the 30 minute recall very quickly. Stephanie explains the base skills her learners have and how others may build this into their treatment package. Be sure to read Stephanie’s article and stay tuned for more important research made accessible!#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Bridging the gap between research and practice.Research making recall skills available to learners.How to use probe fading to increase recall conversations with clients.Mentioned In This Episode:Autism Outreach: #107 The Importance of Comprehension Skills with Dr. Merrill WinstonTeaching Children to Respond to Questions About the Past: A Preliminary AnalysisABA SPEECH Connection Membership
1/30/202430 minutes, 9 seconds
Episode Artwork

#160: School Based BCBAs- A Conversation with Dr. Bruce Tinor

While schools in the past have focused on a consultative model when it comes to BCBAs, it has become a growing trend in the field for schools to hire a district wide BCBA of their own. When you move from a consultant to an actual school employee this opens up a lot of room for dialogue. BCBA, Dr. Bruce Tinor joins me to chime in with this conversation.Dr. Tinor agrees that hiring BCBAs is the right step but just one is not enough. There are certain roles in a school where 1 overseer is enough, but being an effective BCBA requires a lot of hands-on work and direct contact. If you do find yourself in the daunting task of being your district's only BCBA, Dr. Tinor has some great tips to systematically attack and support your school. Even if you are the only BCBA employee of the school, find a community to collaborate and share knowledge and support.Along with all of his wisdom and insight for active school based BCBAs, he shares some advice that applies to even new BCBAs wherever they may land. Pair with your clients. This might mean students, parents, or even other staff but when you have paired up and built rapport, success and trust will follow. #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:The role of a school based BCBA.Tips for working in a school district as a BCBA.The value of collaborating with other BCBAs.Advice for new BCBAs.Mentioned In This Episode:ABA SPEECH Connection Membership
1/23/202425 minutes, 57 seconds
Episode Artwork

#159: Compassionate and Instructional Services- A Discussion With Dr. Erik Jacobson

Joining me from Upstate Caring Partners is Dr. Erik Jacobson. The agency works with a large population of individuals with moderate to severe intellectual disabilities. Upstate CP is focused on changing lives with compassionate care.During our conversation, Dr. Jacobson discusses how Upstate CP has reflected on their previous caretaking model, evaluating hand over hand crafts and goals that don’t last the lifespan. They have transitioned into an instructional model that builds strong relationships and creates a safe environment in a dignified way.Dr. Jacobson shares how their staffing and teams have changed, starting with hiring their very first BCBA in 2019. With a focus on making their program less like school and more like life, they are making lasting changes that are going to positively impact the individuals in their care for life. You can find more about Upstate Caring Partners on their website.  #autism #speechtherapy  What’s Inside:What is Upstate Caring Partners?Transitioning from a caretaking model to an instructional model.How to build strong relationships and create a safe environment in a dignified way.Mentioned In This Episode: Upstate Caring Partners ABA SPEECH Connection Membership
1/16/202426 minutes, 55 seconds
Episode Artwork

#158: ACT and Our Values with Kate Nasuti

Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (or training), also known largely as ACT, is a relatively new premise in the field of ABA. Kate Nasuti who has been a BCBA for over a decade and in the field of ABA for 20+ years, joins me to discuss this important topic.Kate shares her experience learning about ACT and how it's benefited her personally, even comparing “ACT Boot Camp” to a yoga retreat. It’s that impactful. She uses this technique now with parents and providers, giving access to this incredible therapy via coaching with individuals who would not otherwise benefit from ABA. We go through some of the core processes of ACT: Mindfulness, Diffusion, Committed Action, Self as context, Values, and Acceptance. Kate describes some of these in detail, like Value Clarification. She uses this really beautiful quote from Michelangelo on his sculpture of David, “I just chipped all the way through the parts that aren’t David ''...to reveal that for clarification of our own values, we must just remove all the values that aren't ours. Kate shares a ton of great resources, like the ACT course available on PRAXIS and Dr. Steven C. Hayes’ book, The Liberated Mind. ACT is such a beneficial addition to the science of ABA that I really encourage everyone to learn more! #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What is ACT?What are the 6 core processes of ACT?Who can benefit from ACT?Where to find more information and resources on ACT.Mentioned In This Episode:Get access to Kate’s ASHA and ACE course: Is It Really Burnout? Anxiety? How Words Can Get Us Stuck by joining the ABA SPEECH Connection Membership
1/9/202427 minutes, 6 seconds
Episode Artwork

#157: Replay Episode - The Importance of Comprehension Skills with Dr. Merrill Winston

Replay: Episode 107As SLPs and BCBAs, we are tasked with teaching comprehension to our learners, but do they really understand these skills? Dr. Merrill Winston joined me to discuss not only reading comprehension but comprehension in everyday life and the building block skills to be successful.What is comprehension?Whether you're reading a book or listening to a statement, there are 3 markers for comprehension.Repeat it.Follow the Directions or Instructions within it.Talk about it.Dr. Winston and I get into the nitty gritty of that last marker and talk about it when it comes to comprehension of daily life. He says that a major prerequisite for reading comprehension is comprehending their day. You can check this by having your learner sequence, or "serieate," their day. (First I did this, then I did this, then we did that…) With this skill, students are pulling information from the past and making a time reference. You can practice by working in smaller increments, like the last hour even. This doesn't have to be verbal; it can be in pictures or icons as well! But the important thing is to ask those questions!! Students may not be able to serialize their day simply because they aren't being asked these questions.We also talk about goal setting and realistic expectations. If you're considering setting a comprehension goal for your learner, Dr. Winston says to be sure to ask: What is the end goal? Where is this skill going to take them? Every skill you spend time on should have a goal that extends across the lifespan and opens more doors and opportunities. He even goes as far as to say that working on a goal for too long without progress is careless! This was such a great chat with a leader in the field of ABA, and I hope you found it helpful!#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:What does comprehension really mean?How should providers be working on comprehension?What is “seriating your day” and why is it important?Determining functional goals for your learners.How goals and skills build to reach larger goals.Goals that will impact your learners life.Mentioned In This Episode:Winston Behavioral Solutions  ABASpeechByRose - Rose Griffin - Instagram Membership - ABA Speech 
1/2/202439 minutes, 58 seconds
Episode Artwork

#156: Replay Episode - Joint Attention For Toddlers

Replay: Episode 105I love talking about joint attention, but a lot of my ideas and strategies in my courses may feel like they are geared toward older preschool age students. My tips today are for the youngest learners, toddlers age 2 to 3. Joint attention is an important foundational skill and it is never too early to get started with these strategies!3 Ways to Get Started with Joint Attention with Your Toddler TodayBooksBooks are the lifeline for learning and sharing activities and time with our little ones. For these young learners, when reading use a positive, energetic voice. Try using board books and interactive books with flaps. With your own child, make a goal to embed at least 15 minutes to read and interact with a book everyday!Some of my favorites: Huggy Kissy and the Llama Llama series SongsUse YOUR Voice. Learn songs with motions to sing with your toddler. If toddlers aren't speaking they can join in by using the gestures and doing the motions as you sing. You can also use visuals like toys that match the song or printed visuals from my TPT store for early intervention songs.Some of my favorites: Wheels on the Bus, 5 Little Monkeys, Happy and You Know It, Old McDonaldPlayPlaying with toddlers is so fun and you never know what they will love and enjoy. Focus on not asking questions but just modeling simple language and narrating the activity.Some of my favorites: Bubbles, Sensory Bins, Cars with Tracks#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:3 ways you can work on joint attention at home today!Joint attention strategies for toddlers.Tips and tricks for embedding joint attention work in your day to day.How to read books, sing songs, and play with your child to assist with joint attention.Mentioned In This Episode:Books For Speech Therapy For ToddlersSongs for Early Intervention by ABA SPEECH | TPTMembership - ABA Speech
12/26/202324 minutes, 29 seconds
Episode Artwork

#155: What Is Gestalt Language Processing? with Sari Risen

GLP – Gestalt Language Processing, is taking social media by storm. BCBAs and SLPs alike are talking about it… But should it be something we follow and jump into without question? Dually Certified SLP-BCBA Sari Risen joins me to discuss her findings on GLP along with some warnings. So what is GLP? It is basically a distinction against NLA – Natural Language Acquisition, in which NLA individuals learn by developing single words and increasing over time, whereas GLP individuals have longer and longer utterances and develop single words over time. Sari uses the example of a toddler who says “ohh da do” [meaning open the door] will eventually learn the words open, the, and door but would start with the longer utterance before knowing the words individually. Sari took Marge Blanc's 15 hour course on the topic and explained the history of GLP when Dr. Ann Peters made this distinction between NLA and GLP in the 70s. While information on Gestalt is available, it is mostly anecdotal, with very few official studies or evidence.Educate yourself so that you can understand and explain GLP when and if parents ask. Sari and I warn practitioners to think critically about the strategies and theories they use and not to follow something just because of social media. #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What is Gestalt Language Processing (GLP)?Natural Language Acquisition vs Gestalt Language Processing.Should BCBAs be using GLP?What information and evidence is available about GLP.Mentioned In This Episode:srisen@actionpotentialservices.cawww.actionpotentialservices.ca Membership - ABA Speech
12/19/202329 minutes, 55 seconds
Episode Artwork

#154: Prompting Strategies with Landon Cowen

It can be hard to stay up to date on research when you’re busy working with clients. That’s why I love being able to take these important topics and break them down into bite-sized chunks! Today, Landon Cowan, a Doctoral Candidate at Marquette University, shares with me his work on the research article, A Decision-Making Tool for Evaluating and Selecting Prompting Strategies. I think sometimes it can be difficult to see the importance of basic ideas, so we break some of these ideas down to their core. Landon defines a prompt as anything that elicits a desirable response. These are as simple as vocal modeling, visual cues, and gestures, and they are even more frequently used in everyday life with digital alerts and sticky notes.As we discuss the types of prompting and the need for relevant prompting strategies, Landon discusses common inconsistencies and cautions for some prompting. Always holding the final goal in view. The research article includes some really helpful flowcharts to help guide and make data-based decisions on prompting strategies that are relevant to your learner. Landon explains the charts and the other supplemental resources available that can not only assist therapists but can also aid in staff training for a consistent understanding of prompting.Be sure to check out the full article and find Landon on Research Gate and LinkedIn for questions and to follow his other work. Did you like this episode? Please let me know if you want more easy-to-consume research content and what other topics you’d like to hear about! #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What is a prompt?What types of prompts are available to use?How to make data based decisions for prompting strategies.Resources and tools for prompting strategies.Mentioned In This Episode:Landon Cowan Marquette University · Department of Psychology (Behavior Analysis)Landon Cowan on LinkedInA Decision-Making Tool for Evaluating and Selecting Prompting Strategies - PMCMembership - ABA Speech
12/12/202328 minutes, 26 seconds
Episode Artwork

#153: Compassionate Care: A Discussion with Dr. Bridget Taylor

“Fell in love with teaching; fell in love with watching him learn." That's a quote from my guest, Dr. Bridget Taylor. She has a long list of accomplishments, among them being a BCBA and Licensed Psychologist. She shares about her journey into the field and something she has noticed changed since conference early in her career in the 90s. At the time, the ABA profession was still growing, and conferences she spoke at were attended more by parents, with this momentum driven by families who wanted information to help their children. Now, parents are still an equal part of the process as ever, but those seats are filled by professionals who need to then transfer information, support, and training over to these families.We discuss some of the work she has done in this area, including parent training and particularly compassionate care and relationship building. She points out a familiar phrase: ‘People don't care how much you know unless you show how much you care’. This really speaks to the way relationships with families create buy-in, collaboration, and ultimately more positive outcomes for the client. Dr. Taylor describes compassion as empathy in action. She explains that it requires endurance through uncomfortable feelings and an emphasis on listening during those times so that you can understand and support families. As we close, she shares her recommendations on how clinicians can better help parents by attending training, reading articles, seeking mentorship, and truly practicing listening as a skill. #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:The shift in knowledge seeking conferences since the 90s.What can clinicians do to help parents?What is compassionate care when it comes to parent conversations?Skills and resources for parent training.Mentioned In This Episode:Building and Sustaining Compassionate Relationships with Caregivers | ABA TechnologiesMembership - ABA Speech
12/5/202333 minutes, 24 seconds
Episode Artwork

#152: Early Intervention and Supporting Parents with Dr. Tracy Raulston

Family and parent support and education are so important, especially when it comes to our youngest learners. Today, I am talking with Dr. Tracy Raulston. She is such a bright spot in the field, with so much information to spread and a great project in the works.Dr. Raulston helps me discern the difference between Natural Environment Training and NDBI. When we are working with young learners in early intervention, play-based therapy is so crucial. Dr. Raulston explains how NDBI utilizes developmentally based instruction and strategies with child development front and center. Providers using NDBI are using protocols focusing on social connection, sensory exploration, and speech milestones.The Mindful Routines Project is Dr. Raulston's initiative to provide clear and seamless tools to support parents and families. Being a parent is hard, and parents of autistic children are at an increased risk of stress. This project embeds mindful tools like noticing and validating thoughts and feelings without judgment and encourages parents to be more compassionate with themselves. As Dr. Raulston builds this project, she anticipates an 8-week curriculum for BCBA’s providing family guidance.Families and parents are our learners' biggest influences and advocates. It is so great to hear about more awareness and tools for BCBAs to work to support these important members of our community.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:How providers can support families and parents.Are parents of autistic children at risk of increased stress?What is the Mindful Routines Project?What is the difference between Natural Environment Training and NDBI?Mentioned In This Episode:tjr27@txstate.eduDr. Tracy Raulston on LinkedInMembership - ABA Speech
11/28/202329 minutes, 31 seconds
Episode Artwork

#151: The Journey of Raising an Autistic Child with Profound Autism with Jeannette Passanisi

When Jeannette Passanisi landed on my TikTok For You Page (‘the FYP’ if you’re familiar with the popular social media platform), I knew I had to have her on the show. Jeannette is a mom of 3, with her youngest son, Robbie, being autistic. Jeannette shares his developmental delays, swept aside early on as being the baby of the family; however, she soon realized he was not developing like her older girls and sought advice. Eventually leading to a diagnosis of PDD NOS at age 4. At the time, autism diagnoses were harder to get, especially at a young age. During our conversation, she shares how his diagnosis changed in 2017 to level 3 autism and, more recently, to more profound autism.Having a profoundly autistic son requires a lot of direct care. As Jeannette mentions his lack of sleep, tendencies to rage pace, and other behaviors, Robbie needs to always be accompanied and needs assistance with a lot of daily tasks. Jeannette is also Robbie's #1 advocate, always making sure that he receives the best quality and most positive therapy techniques. She provides great examples of how she advocates for her son. “Everyone has the ability to improve at their own pace” is just one gem from Jeannette’s and my talk. You can learn more about her family and autism journey on TikTok @Running4Robbie.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:A mother sharing her autism journey on TikTok.Seeing signs of autism at age 4.How availability and quality of diagnosis has changed over time.Navigating and advocating therapy services for older autistic children and adults.Mentioned In This Episode:Running4Robbie - TikTokMembership - ABA Speech
11/21/202329 minutes, 17 seconds
Episode Artwork

#150: Early Intervention and Autism with Dr. Mary Barbera

Here we are at episode 150! I am so happy to be here sharing and disseminating this important information with you every week. To celebrate this milestone, my favorite guest, friend, mentor, and colleague, Dr. Mary Barbera, joins me.If you’re not familiar with her amazing work, she shares her remarkable journey into the autism world. Working as a nurse and starting her family, her world and purpose changed when her oldest son Lucas was diagnosed with autism just before his 3rd birthday. She went from a mom in denial to a BCBA, author, online educator, and podcast host on a mission to create awareness and help parents and families with autistic children get the best outcomes for their children.We cover a really important topic in early intervention...  Is it a speech delay or autism? She breaks down the procedures necessary to get started when you’re working with a child who is not yet speaking. When it comes to her Turn Autism Around Framework, the first step is Asses. She advises assessing the child’s Expressive & Receptive Language (verbal and nonverbal), as well as feeding and sleeping habits. Mary Barbera really encourages parents to be the “Captain of the Ship”. Parents are a child's best advocate, and she has an abundance of tools and resources for parents via her Turn Autism Around book, Online Courses and Community, and her new digital assessment. Her goal is to help every child reach their fullest potential while being as safe, happy, and independent as possible. #autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:How to get started with Early Intervention?Tools and Resources for parents of autistic children.A new digital assessment for your child.What is the Turn Autism Around Framework?Tips for parents to take action and become the captain of the ship.Mentioned In This Episode:Dr. Mary Barbera Membership - ABA Speech
11/14/202343 minutes, 42 seconds
Episode Artwork

#149: The Importance Of Ethics With Dr. Linda LeBlanc

Things are bound to happen. Whether you are a new or seasoned provider, you will surely encounter an ethical dilemma. Licensed Clinical Psychologist and BCBA-D, Dr. Linda LeBlanc, is on to talk about the importance of ethics, provider values, and her new book, Ethics: Proactive and Practical Decision Making for Behavior Analysts.For many, your position in the field of ABA is the first professional role where you are officially responsible for the outcome of a vulnerable person. Your personal underlying values are important to decision making when it comes to the code of ethics. Ethical situations in this field can bring questions to boundaries and relationships appropriate for the role.The first response to an ethical situation is often a gut response. But Dr. LeBlanc poses the idea of how providers can be proactive in their ethical framework before specific ethical dilemmas even arise. She explains the big picture of her up and coming book in three parts that will cover history, values, and personal behavior, a dissection of each section of the ethics code, and practical everyday management of ethics.Following the code of ethics is not about perfection; it is about being planned, intentional, and thoughtful in a way that protects you and your client. You can find out more about Dr. Linda LeBlanc at her website and read a preview of her book at Sloan Publishing. #autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:How new providers may encounter ethical dilemmas.The underlying values and personal decision making behind the ethical code.A framework for proactive ethical management.Dr. Lina LeBlanc’s book, Ethics: Proactive and Practical Decision Making for Behavior AnalystsMentioned In This Episode:LeBlanc Behavioral Consulting​​Sloan Publishing - Ethics: Proactive and Practical Decision Making for Behavior AnalystsMembership - ABA Speech
11/7/202327 minutes, 4 seconds
Episode Artwork

#148: 5 Mistakes I Have Made Working With Autistic Students

As an SLP - BCBA working in the field for the last two decades, I have certainly made mistakes and learned along the way. Today I am sharing my top 5 mistakes and what I would do differently. Because when we know better, we do better.1. Yes/No Questions – working on this too early is not productive; it is important but requires a much higher level language!2. Not setting specific goals on Joint Attention - Good providers have these opportunities naturally, but it's necessary to set specific goals and specific focus using the three-part framework - Books, Music, and Play!3. JARGON - using too much professional jargon is not the right move unless you’re talking to ONLY other members of your profession. Ethically, you need to use words that are understandable by all!4. The term “Red Flags” - in reference to autism “Red Flags” have a negative connotation. Use language that supports your learners; try language like “Signs” or “Characteristics”.5. Eye Contact as a goal - while eye contact can be a helpful skill, it's not directly important to communication and will often be a natural by-product of focusing on joint attention.  In a world where 1 in 36 individuals has autism, we have to be striving to support autistic learners in every way we can. #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Top 5 Mistakes when working with autistic students.Changing your language to support autistic learners.Why you shouldn't use jargon in IEP meetings.Are Yes/No questions important?How to set goals for joint attention.Can eye contact be a by-product of other communication goals?Mentioned In This Episode:IEP Goals for Students with Autism - ABA SpeechMembership - ABA Speech
10/31/202325 minutes, 6 seconds
Episode Artwork

#147: An Introduction To AAC

Enjoy this free training from my new series, Communication Without Limits. In this presentation, I am providing an introduction to AAC. AAC is a powerful tool that can help learners communicate and find their voice for the very first time. I share a personal story from my career where AAC did just that. What an amazing feeling!I cover important information to support SLPs-BCBAs such as the Communication Bill of Rights, as well as who to turn to for support when it comes to finding devices, programs, and collaborating in your district or center. Utilizing an AAC requires a team; this is the learners voice and everyone has to be on the same page, including SLPs, BCBAs, OTs, Teachers, Parents, etc.How do you know you need an AAC? I go over the steps of a comprehensive assessment involving Case History, Ecological Inventory, Self-Report, and Sensory-Motor Status. Once you’ve determined the need for AAC, you need to determine the system that will optimize communication for your learner. This is an important feature matching process where, as the provider, you determine access, language systems, and the materials or devices appropriate for the learner.I hope you continue to tune in to future free training on important topics in ABA. To stay in the loop, receive more in depth training and tutorials, and connect with other professionals, consider joining the ABA Speech Connection Membership.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What is AAC?An introduction and guide for SLP-BCBAs in AAC.What is involved in a comprehensive assessment for AAC?Who can help with an AAC?How to choose the right AAC.Mentioned In This Episode:AAC - Slides and HandoutsMembership - ABA Speech
10/24/202331 minutes, 18 seconds
Episode Artwork

#146: Early Intervention and Project Impact with Anna Dvortcsak and Dr. Brook Ingersoll

My guests today, Anna Dvortsak and Dr. Brook Ingersoll, are the creators of Project ImPACT, an important initiative in the field to provide access for parent coaching and train parents for a collaborative approach to therapy.Project ImPACT is a systemic approach to parent mediated intervention for parents of young children with social communication delays, with or without a diagnosis. This parent coaching teaches parents to work with their children to create relevant skills and goals for their community and needs in four main targets; Social Engagement, Communication, Imitation, and Play.There are many programs and systems that may not be attainable for some providers. Anna and Dr. Ingersoll have worked to make this an accessible program with an easy to follow and systemic coaching guide. For those who want more training with Project ImPACT is available but not required.Collaboration is such an important part of a young child's intervention, not just with providers but with their family and their community. That’s why Anna and Dr. Ingersoll created this program with a holistic view of a child's needs beyond the therapy room, with strategies parents can implement daily.You can find out more about Project ImPACT by visiting their website.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:What is Project ImPACT?How Anna Dvortscak and Dr. Ingersoll created a parent curriculum.Four targets for social communication.A systematic approach to parent coaching.Mentioned In This Episode:Project ImPACT Membership - ABA Speech
10/17/202320 minutes, 17 seconds
Episode Artwork

#145: Early Echoic Skills with Dr. Barbara E. Esch

As a member of the field, you have probably heard of and used the VB-MAPP. Today I am talking to Dr. Barbara Esch, who is an experienced contributor to the field as an SLP and BCBA-D, as well as the author of the EESA, a part of the VB-MAPP. Dr. Esch recently released the “New EESA”, the Early Echoic Skills Assessment and Program Planner. She explains the changes and the reasoning behind them. The EESA is not about articulation, as it is primarily focused on Early Speech Learners. This assessment and planner is about how well an individual can repeat what they hear with the criteria: the number of syllables 1 to 6, different numbers of consonants, and different numbers of vowels.In the new EESA you will find 5 groups of increasingly complex syllables within the Guide and Protocol books. These also include FAQ, Translations, and a Work Packet. In the work packet, the administrator will analyze skill levels and utilize the program planning guidance. It’s always important to me to keep things FUNctional. Dr. Esch and I discuss the importance of choosing the write targets and the write syllables for words of things our learners like and would need access to. As creator of the EESA, Dr. Barbara Esch has had a hand in thousands of learners' development of verbal speech. You can utilize this tool whether you're an SLP, BCBA, Parent, Caretaker or anyone finding themselves responsible for teaching vocal speech!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Dr. Barbara Esch’s contribution to the field of ABA.The EESA versus the Early Echoic Skills Assessment and Program Planner.What is syllable complexity and why does it matter?/A tool for anyone teaching verbal speech.Mentioned In This Episode:Dr. Barbara EschDifferent Roads to LearningMembership - ABA Speech
10/10/202340 minutes, 8 seconds
Episode Artwork

#144: Creating a Positive Work Atmosphere with Dr. Ellie Kazemi

Have you ever been in a position where you’ve only seen your supervisor or administrator when there is conflict? Dr. Ellie Kazemi, behavior analyst and keynote speaker, joins me to discuss the work environment and how to build a positive work atmosphere, whether that’s in an ABA clinic or in a school based setting.What is crucial to a positive atmosphere? Shared values and open communication. These important ideals come up over and over again throughout Dr. Kazemi's and my discussion. In order for teams to feel appreciated, psychologically safe, and have the desire for growth, they need administration and colleagues that promote transparency, shared values, and a framework to train resiliency for the ever changing systems.If you’re a supervisor or administrator listening, consider how often and how naturally you’re making yourself available for conversations with your team. Dr. Kazemi emphasizes the point that there needs to be consistent, visible support from leadership.Without these ideals, providers can face burnout, and even worse, the client can suffer. At the end of the day, we all want to make a difference and provide the best outcomes for our clients. The first step is creating a positive atmosphere for providers. You can find Dr. Ellie Kazemi on her website, Instagram, and LinkedIn.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Top tips for creating a positive work environment.The importance of shared values and open communication in any organization.How to cultivate psychological safety.The impact of the work environment on growth and investment in the mission.The importance of supervisor and administrative visibility.Mentioned In This Episode:Ellie KazemiEllie Kazemi - LinkedInEllie Kazemi (@ellie.kazemi) on InstagramMembership - ABA Speech
10/3/202329 minutes, 43 seconds
Episode Artwork

#143: Data Collection For Autistic Learners

How do you know if your therapy is working? Data collection is an important aspect of therapy to analyze goals and student improvement. During my 20 years of public school experience, I once had my data subpoenaed! It might be rare, but it CAN happen, so you want to be prepared.Depending on your student goals and program, the way you collect data may differ. For some students, it may be appropriate to cold probe and collect discontinuous data with other continuous trials may be necessary. I explain how I use Google Forms to create digital data tracking for whichever need you have, which you can even attach to your Google Calendar to appear when you’re working with each student.When it comes to paper data, many teachers and therapists create a data binder. For me, I like to include a calendar template, IEP goals and objectives, and then the various data sheets and task lists. Consistently tracking data is crucial for your students and for yourself when it comes to creating progress reports, discussing progress in meetings, and even in the event the court may subpoena your data, like they did for me. Be sure to check out all of the resources I discussed today so that you can make your data collection habits organized and efficient.#autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:Why is data collection important?What are the various modes of data collection?How to organize data.How to individualize data collection.What to do if your data is subpoenaed?Mentioned In This Episode:Speech Therapy Data BinderData Collection using Google FormsMembership - ABA Speech
9/26/202326 minutes, 3 seconds
Episode Artwork

#142: Service Delivery For Autistic Learners

As we enter the beginning of the school year, I want to go over my 20 years of experience in the field to discuss service delivery models in a school based setting. Our goal is always to support students in the best way possible, and the best way to do this is through an individualized approach to service delivery. Depending on your learners needs, there are a variety of models you can consider. The need for these can depend on goals, age, needs, and the school environment. 1 on 1 in office1 on 1 in the classroom2 on 1 in the office or common spaceLarge group/ whole classroomSmall structured groupMonthly/Quarterly check insTeam Consults Parent ObservationBCBA ConsultsThe best way to make the biggest difference is to embed communication across the learners day and lifespan. From preschool to high school and beyond, service needs will vary greatly. The only thing that is constant is that EVERY student will need individualization. Begin the new school year by building rapport, writing amazing goals, and getting to know everyone on your learners team!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Common service delivery models for autistic learners.How to decide the best service delivery model for your student.What combination of service delivery can you use?How to provide services across the lifespan?Mentioned In This Episode:Membership - ABA Speech
9/19/202331 minutes, 3 seconds
Episode Artwork

#141: The Autism Connection Membership Is Here

Working in this field, whether as an SLP, BCBA, or both, can be isolating, and meeting CEU requirements can be overwhelming and feel pointless. The Autism Connection CEU Membership is a professional development community to help SLPs and BCBAs make meaningful progress with autistic learners. Those already a part of the community have called it a positive space to learn and grow.What can you expect from the membership?-Every new member will receive 1 on 1 onboarding with me, Rose Griffin.-A path tailored for seasoned professionals and those brand new to the field.-Monthly live ASHA and ACE approved CEUs.-Monthly Live Q&A.-A cataloged CEU library.Expect to see topics such as Group Therapy, AAC Assessments, Navigating IEPs with Ethics and Confidence, The Power of Joint Attention, Goal Setting Across the Lifespan, and I will also be leading an Intro to ABA series. This membership community is launching NOW! Join before September 19th, during the founders launch, and receive these benefits:-Free Advanced Language Learner Course – $297 value-Join Annual for $197 first year + Double Up and Leisure Vocabulary Game - 35% savings-Join Monthly for $20 for the first 6 months and $30 per month for the following months. I cannot wait to have you a part of our community so that together we can make the most difference in our autistic clients' lives.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What is the Autism Connection Membership?What kind of CEU topics will the membership include?Great deals for Founding Members.Real reviews from members of the Autism Connection Membership Community.Mentioned In This Episode:Membership - ABA Speech
9/12/202315 minutes, 33 seconds
Episode Artwork

#140: Becoming an SLP/BCBA with Ashley Whitaker

Today I am talking to a “unicorn”. Ashley Whitaker is one of the 505 (at the time of this recording) dually certified SLP/BCBAs! Ashley has been in the field for 10 years and shares her path to certification.Ashley started her undergrad with the idea to become a teacher after a lifelong passion for helping kids learn. When her roommate suggested a course in speech, the rest was history. Shortly after her career began, she was exposed to ABA and began her journey to BCBA certification.As prep for the exam, Ashley recorded herself reading The Cooper Book summaries and relistened to them during her commute, as well as taking mock exams and using the ABA Wizard App. If you're listening and interested in becoming a BCBA, remember that the requirements are always changing, so be sure to download the BCBA handbook for the latest information. I actually met Ashley through ABA Speech, and she is a part of the new ABA Speech Connection CEU Membership. Her experience has shown it is a like minded group of professionals and a collaborative community. With the membership, Ashley has found a place to ask questions and learn in a non judgmental space.As always, I want you to leave this episode with actionable tips to use in your therapy room. Listen to the end to see how Ashley uses Essentials for Living as a framework in her practice.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:The career path of an SLP/BCBA.Study and prep for the BCBA exam.What is the ABA SPEECH Connection CEU Membership?Tips for using frameworks in your everyday practice.Mentioned In This Episode:Learn more about the ABA SPEECH Connection CEU Membership and Joint Attention on September 12th at 8-9pm eastern and September 13th at 8-9pm eastern. 
9/5/202332 minutes, 58 seconds
Episode Artwork

#139: Autism and Insurance Coverage- A Discussion with Lorri Unumb

My guest today, Lorri Unumb needs no introduction. Lorri is a mother of three, an autism mom, a lawyer, an autism advocate, and an absolute dynamo in the field. Be sure to check out her long list of achievements in the guest bio for this episode!We are talking about something so important and impactful for families everywhere who have an autism diagnosis: insurance. In 2003 when Lorri’s youngest, Ryan, was diagnosed ABA was not a covered treatment even though it was evidence based and crucial to his opportunity to reach his highest potential. Full time ABA therapy for Ryan’s needs would run $70,000+ annually. And they weren't the only family dealing with this.  While Lorri’s family could make it work, paying full price for therapy was not ideal and for some families this would simply not be possible. So in 2005 she got to work writing a bill that would require insurance coverage for all evidence based autism treatments to include ABA. And after a 2 year journey what became known as “Ryan’s Law” was passed in 2007.  Autism Speaks reached out to employ Lorri and she then spent the next decade replicating this law across the country, finally passing in the 50th state in 2019.Lorri also shares about her role in the Council for Autism Service Providers, a collaborative organization of providers working and learning together from across the country. And as an autism mom herself she has some great advice for parents facing new diagnosis: “It gets better”.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:How insurance for autism treatment has changed in the last 20 years.What is Ryan’s Law?The impact of high cost and uncovered autism treatment for families.What is the Council of Autism Service Providers?Advice for autism parents.Mentioned In This Episode:Council of Autism Service ProvidersThe Autism Law SummitLearn more about the ABA SPEECH Connection CEU Membership and Joint Attention on September 12th at 8-9pm eastern (https://us02web.zoom.us/j/835049703570) and September 13th at 8-9pm eastern. (https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86200908099)
8/29/202324 minutes, 33 seconds
Episode Artwork

#138: Restrictive and Repetitive Behavior with Dr. Jonathan Fernand

Have you ever had a client exhibit behaviors that you just don’t know how to approach? Dr. Jonathan Fernand has had experiences in the field across many settings that aid in his understanding on intervening with restrictive and repetitive behaviors. Restrictive and repetitive behaviors can mean a variety of behaviors, from high order (compulsive and ritualistic) to low order (self injurious and vocal/motor stereotypy). But when do these behaviors warrant intervention?Dr. Fernand reminds us that while every decision is contextual and depends solely on the individual, there are factors that contribute to deciding on the intervention process. Consider safety, health and wellness, community, and other lifespan barriers as indicators for intervention. Prioritize the need for intervention and differing methods with changes in skills and interests. It’s also important to note that not all restrictive and repetitive behaviors need to be at zero levels if they can be enjoyed appropriately.This conversation is great for SLPs, who are often in situations where they feel like they are calling in the BCBA when things have gone too far wrong and can maybe do more to intervene preventatively. Dr. Fernand, like me, is an advocate for lifelong learning. He urges professionals to access a network of resources and lean on colleagues and mentors to learn and grow.   #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What are Restrictive and Repetitive Behaviors?What does it mean for behavior to become a barrier to behavior?What behaviors warrant intervention?What are high and low order behaviors?Prioritizing and revisiting the best intervention process.Making contextual decisions for every client and behavior.Mentioned In This Episode:Dr. Jonathan Fernand on LinkedInJonathan K. Fernand Florida Institute of Technology · School of Behavior AnalysisLearn more about the ABA SPEECH Connection CEU Membership and Joint Attention on September 12th at 8-9pm eastern and September 13th at 8-9pm eastern. 
8/22/202346 minutes, 28 seconds
Episode Artwork

#137: ABA as A Science Of Love and Change with Dr. Shahla Alai-Rosales and Peggy Heinkel-Wolfe

Get ready for an inspiring episode. I chatted with Dr. Shahla Alai-Rosales and Peggy Heinkel-Wolfe, who co-authored the book Responsible and Responsive Parenting in Autism: Between Now and Dreams.This comes from Dr. Alai-Rosales’ extensive professional career and over 4 years of experience in the field, as well as Peggy’s personal experience as an Autism mom. The book binds together responsive parenting into three parts: Learning, Loving, and Connecting.We discuss a philosophy prominent in the book, ABA, as a science of love and change. Dr. Alai-Rosales explains the deep care and concern required to work with an individual when trying to change behavior. Being a provider, you must harmonize the process of change with your deep regard for human rights and the individual you’re responsible for.For professionals, these two share some insight into how to cultivate genuine kindness and positivity that will impact your clients and their families. Remembering your why and purpose in the field and staying present in the moment can help ground you. This is a great reminder that although this is work, our time is a precious gift to our clients and their families, and every conversation makes a difference.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Responsible and Responsive Parenting in Autism: Between Now and DreamsABA as a science of love and changeHarmonizing Change with regard for humanityHow professionals can be more genuinely positiveThe importance in your why behind your workMentioned In This Episode:Responsible and Responsive Parenting in Autism: Between Now and DreamsLearn more about the ABA SPEECH Connection CEU Membership and Joint Attention on September 12th at 8-9pm eastern and September 13th at 8-9pm eastern. 
8/15/202340 minutes, 59 seconds
Episode Artwork

#136: Autistic Burnout and Creating Neuro-Affirming Environments with Larissa Minner

Having an autistic adult on the podcast is always an opportunity to learn how we, as practitioners, can do our best for our clients. Joining me today is Larissa Minner, a passionate and experienced disability rights advocate, speaker, and consultant. Burnout is commonly talked about, and I've even done an episode where we talked about professional burnout in the field. Larissa talks about Autistic Burnout and Neurodivergent Burnout and what that looks like for many individuals. Signs and symptoms of Autistic (or Nuerodivergent) Burnout can include feeling drain in all aspects of life, an increase in executive functional challenges, a lowered coping skill level, regression and loss of skills, brain fog, physical fatigue, mimicking and causing depression/anxiety, and even being a factor involved in suicidal ideation. This causes a lot of problems for autistic individuals, like finding a job or making their way through university. So what can we do? As professionals, we can provide Neuro Affirming Environments. A Neuro Affirming Environment applies to social, emotional, and physical aspects, and Larissa explains some ways to do that without putting the burden on the autistic person. Firstly, use the person's preferred language, whether they prefer Autistic Person or Person with Autism. Also developing language that is not based on a person’s deficit; for example, Larissa uses the term Strategic Explorer to verbalize her preference for routine. Additionally, consider sensory friendly rooms with adjustable lighting and noise accommodations, validations in different listening and communicating skills, and always giving ample warning when it comes to events and changes. Larissa is active in making changes across the field for both autistic children and autistic adults when it comes to healthcare, education, and career opportunities. This is a great conversation that shares some less talked about advocacy for autistic people and encourages professionals to check themselves when it comes to providing compassionate care.  #autism #speechtherapy  What’s Inside:What is Autistic Burnout?What are signs and symptoms of Autistic Burnout?What is a Neuro Affirming Environment?How can providers be Neuro Affirming?Advocacy goals for education, healthcare, and career finding.The importance of preferred language surrounding autism and disabilities. Mentioned In This Episode:You can participate in her ongoing research study at Shape in Healthcare Survey (Healthcare Equality)You can find out more about Larissa and her work at: https://linktr.ee/larissaminner
8/8/202338 minutes, 38 seconds
Episode Artwork

#135: The Importance of Assent - A Conversation with Dr. Cody Morris

My guest today Dr. Cody Morris is an asset to the field, his goals include improving the practice of BCBAs, by Improving assessment and treatment methodologies regarding problem behavior and addressing organization challenges in delivering services.Today we discuss Assent, its importance, and how to gain Assent even when a client is not yet speaking.  Dr. Morris makes a very important comparison in definitions between Consent and Assent. Consent: the affirmation that an individual who is legally authorized gives permission for themselves or another person to participate.Assent: the affirmation that an individual who is not legally authorized to provide their own consent, affirms their willingness to participate.Both of these are incredibly important, Consent has many legalities that affirm participation. Assent on the other hand, can be difficult to confirm when a child has limited or no communication skills. There are multiple ways to gain assent. 1, through Verbal statements or 2, through Behavior Allocation. Assent can be obtained when a student's behavior allocated the confirmation to engage through choice. Choice does not mean the student decides all goals and treatment, but as Dr. Morris and I discuss small choices that affirm engagement and build to grander decision making skills. In our conversation today, Dr. Cody Morris and I discuss some important fundamentals of behavior analysis that heavily involve Assent as a best practice. You can find out more about Dr. Morris’s work and research in the provided links. #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Consent versus Assent in affirming participation.How to gain assent with children who are not yet speaking?Tools and tips for gaining assent.Assent through choice in treatment.Assent through behavior allocation.How to provide gradual choice despite communication skills.Mentioned In This Episode:Dr. Cody Morris on LinkedInCody MORRIS | Assistant Professor | Ph.D. | Salve Regina University, Rhode Island | Department of Psychology | Research profile
8/1/202337 minutes, 5 seconds
Episode Artwork

#134: Autism Case Study Series - Part 4

Welcome to the fourth and final part of my Autism Case Study Series. I am going back over my last 20 years of experience in public education, non-public programs, and teletherapy working with autistic learners. The last learner I want to talk about is a 3 year old boy that I saw in-home with my private practice, ABA Speech. When I first began services, the child had received an autism diagnosis, was not yet speaking, and was attending ABA services. After two years of working with this child, he had begun to speak in sentences and enjoy group activities.I saw this child weekly for 35 minutes of instruction and 10 minutes of parent coaching. In my very first session with this learner, I focused on Joint attention using my 3 pronged approach: Music, Books, and Play. We sang Wheels on the Bus with motions, we read Pete the Cat, and we played with bubbles! These are some of my go-to resources. The child at first was not engaged or interested at all, but I continued to observe and take data, and engagement increased over time.We even saw this child’s first spontaneous word during a play section of therapy. Playing with mini objects in a bag, the child reached in and pulled out a miniature shoe and said the word “shoe”! After that, engagement continued to increase. We played with miniature objects in many different ways, shaking them up in bags and hiding them in the learning space. This series has been designed to help you resonate and feel inspired to help your clients or children develop a way to communicate with the world. What do you think of solo shows? Send me a DM on Instagram, an email, or please take time to leave a review. Stay tuned for the launch of my community membership coming in Fall 2023; send me an email if you want to get in early.  #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Speech services for toddlers with autism.The 3 prong approach to joint attention.Learning through music, books, and play.From not yet speaking to spontaneous language.How to structure in-home therapy.Mentioned In This Episode:Start Communicating Today- Toddler and Preschool Course
7/25/202324 minutes, 19 seconds
Episode Artwork

#133: Autism Case Study Series - Part 3

Welcome to Part 3 of 4 of my Autism Case Study Series. I am going back over my last 20 years of experience in public education, non-public programs, and teletherapy working with autistic learners. Today I am sharing about an elementary learner from a non-public program. He came to me with no communication and unsafe behaviors that were a barrier to his learning, community, and school environment. This student actually brought with him a beautifully set up AAC on his iPad but had zero tools for utilization. As we worked with this student in this non-public program, we collaborated with his parents, his home district (a rural area 1 hour away), and he was in a private classroom with 2 male assistants to keep everyone safe. I worked with this child for 1 hour a week in his classroom. We began work on building receptive language, requesting, understanding basic vocabulary: nouns and actions, joint attention, social engagement, and utilizing his iPad. Several things helped me be successful with this learner. I was able to meet the learner where he was and engage in a way that was respectful of his preferences. I helped him with modified leisure skills like modified memory, where we used video modeling. During my work with this student, my idea for Action Build Cards also came to life.Things took a big turn when this student realized his AAC was his voice. He began to use his iPad with pride. We even took community based outings to lunch places where the learner was able to use his AAC with a cashier to order his lunch. If you’ve taken my course, Help Me Find My Voice, you may have even seen this learner in some of my videos.Stay tuned for Part 4 of this case study series next week, where I will share about a 2 year old learner!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:A case study from a non public program.Working with learners with unsafe behaviors.Finding a learner's voice with barriers to learning, community, and school environment.Teaching a learner to utilize AAC.From zero communication to AAC utilization at home, school, and the community.Teaching modified leisure with modified memory.Action Builder Cards for action phrase vocabulary.Mentioned In This Episode:Social skills for students with autism- Modified MemorySchool-Age CourseAction Builder Cards
7/18/202327 minutes, 33 seconds
Episode Artwork

#132: Autism Case Study Series - Part 2

Welcome to Part 2 of 4 of my Autism Case Study Series. I am going back over my last 20 years of experience in public education, non-public programs, and teletherapy working with autistic learners. Today I am sharing about an 8-year-old nonverbal learner I worked with in a non-public program. This learner came to me with no way to communicate with the world and various behaviors that were barriers to safety and learning. He really struggled with the learning environment, and I had to be creative.Building rapport and getting to know your learner is so important. My usual iPad videos and sensory toys were not interesting to this learner, so I had to think outside the box. Listening to country music, special light up sensory toys, small objects to carry, and even mirrors ended up being some of the learners biggest interests and reinforcers. I saw this learner in two 30-minute sessions across their school day, individually in my office. We started communication with AAC using an app on a device, which we really had to adapt this learner to. We also used visual prompts in an AAC binder with laminated pictures of familiar and favorite things. These solo sessions were built around these three goals and activities:Focus on interests (requesting and orienting on the iPad)Following one step directions/ functional routines in the larger school environmentJoint attention with turn taking activities, modified leisure skills like Modified Connect Four, where I used video modeling.As time progressed over several years, we worked on labeling, verbal imitation, and vocational skills. Eventually we segued into ½ individual and ½ group sessions where this learner became a shining star in more modified leisure games like Musical Chairs, Simon Says, and the Grocery Store game.Stay tuned for part 3 of this Autism Case Studies series! #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Thinking outside the box for interests and reinforcers.Helping learners find their voice with AAC.Practicing joint attention with modified leisure skills.The structure of speech therapy in a non-public program.A progression of therapy goals over time. Mentioned In This Episode:Connect Four Modified - YouTubeSocial skills game for mixed groups - ABA SpeechSave $100 on our autism courses!Toddler & Preschool Course - ABA SpeechSchool-Age Course - ABA SpeechThe Advanced Language Learner - ABA Speech
7/11/202321 minutes, 52 seconds
Episode Artwork

#131: Autism Case Study Series - Part 1

Welcome to Part 1 of 4 of my Autism Case Study Series. I am going back over my last 20 years of experience in public education, non-public programs, and teletherapy working with autistic learners. In this case study, I discuss a middle school learner in public education. He had recently come to the country and was completely nonverbal. I first began with AAC to give him a voice and start communication. He did have to shape up his point with OT to make this accessible, but from there we began to build rapport. I also started using sign language and the resource LifePrint for his teaching area.For assessment, I did the VB-Mapp and collaborated on this with his teacher, paraprofessional, and BCBA. The collaborative piece was so important, and we were all working really hard to help this learner find his voice. The VB-Mapp is a great gauge of expressive, receptive, and social language skills. I structured our therapy around functional goals for this learner involved in leisure skills, requesting, and sharing activities. I worked with this learner in solo sessions in his classroom setting twice a week, and once with group activities. I used a variety of resources that were tailored to the likes and interests of the learner to gain verbal imitation, and from there I inventoried his sounds and began to build more words and phrases.The focus of these case studies is to help and inform therapists on how to work with our hard learners. We can make this fun and functional, give these learners their voice, and change their lives. Stay tuned for part 2.#autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:A Case Study Series of autistic learners.From nonverbal to words and phrases to power of speech therapy and collaboration.Session samples for a nonverbal learner.The assessment process for an autistic learner.A case study from public education.Mentioned In This Episode:LifePrintSave $100 on our autism courses!Toddler & Preschool Course - ABA SpeechSchool-Age Course - ABA SpeechThe Advanced Language Learner - ABA Speech
7/4/202327 minutes, 52 seconds
Episode Artwork

#130: Tech Tips For Autistic Learners with Joan Green

Technology can feel intimidating, but there are so many tools available on your common devices that you might not even consider using them in therapy. Joan Green is an SLP, assistive technology specialist, and online tech advisor. In this episode, she shares 10 tech tips that anyone can use to utilize technology and enrich your therapy sessions. As SLPs, it's important for us to know and understand the assistive apps and accessibility features available, especially functions that are useful across the lifespan. As Joan explains these tips, she shares examples, scenarios, and easy ways to integrate these technology features into therapy with various ages.Ten Tech Tips:Maps: show your learner about their neighborhood, city or other places they might be interested in.Photos: This can be a leisure activity by looking through photos or even a way to communicate by snapping pictures and sending them.Calendar: scheduling and visual calendars like the iOS or Google Calendar are great tools that can be used across the lifespan.Speech to text: visual power of words; let your learner see the words they are speaking.Text to Speech: This feature can make any digitally written word become read aloud.Captions: this is an important accessibility feature, available for free on most devices and audio platforms.Video Calls: this can help with visual cues in a phone call format and empower individuals to make calls.Smart Assistance: Alexa, Siri, and Google can all be used with voice commands and can be empowering to impact action and have voice recognition.Engaging activities with fun learning apps: these are great ways to use side by side with accessibility devices for joint attention, Joan recommends Khan Academy Kids on iOS and Android.AAC devices and apps: these devices and applications can give your learner a voice, or assist when speech may be stressful in certain circumstances.Joan offers a ton of information on technology and some awesome ways she helps professionals in the field. Be sure to download the free PDF for today’s listeners to learn all about these 10 tech tips and check out her platforms online. #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:10 tech tips for your therapy sessions today.Understanding important accessibility features.How can simple, everyday tech be used in therapy?How to incorporate devices into therapy?How to utilize AAC devices and apps for different situations.Mentioned In This Episode:10 Tech Tips to Enhance CommunicationInnovative Speech TherapyIST Tech Savvy Solutions Public Group | FacebookAmazon.com: Assistive Technology in Special Education: Resources to Support Literacy, Communication, and Learning DifferencesSave $100 on our autism courses!Toddler/Preschool Course School- Age CourseThe Advanced Language Learner
6/27/202330 minutes, 25 seconds
Episode Artwork

#129: How to Build Good Behavior and Self-Esteem in Children with Dr. Hank Schlinger

Dr. Hank Schlinger has an extensive list of impressive and valuable contributions to the field. Today he joins me to discuss his brand new book, How to Build Good Behavior and Self-Esteem in Children. Parenting is so hard and along with it comes responsibility that will span your child’s entire life. Whether your child has an autism diagnosis or not, parenting is parenting. Dr. Schlinger discusses the idea of intentional parenting, in which, as parents, we consistently reinforce and model good behavior and set clear boundaries. Dr. Schlinger also goes over 5 common problems parents face that contribute to behavior and self-esteem.Parents are unaware of how their child's behavior affects them and vice versa.Parents believe just telling their kids what to do should work.Parents teach their child to ‘be the boss’Parents ignore good behavior and reinforce bad behaviorParents think that a good kid or a bad kid is just the luck of the draw.During this awesome conversation, Dr. Schlinger discusses each of these problems and offers solutions for parents to be more intentional as well as build good behavior and self-esteem. You can find his book on Amazon or find out more by visiting the book's website.#autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:What is intentional parenting?5 common problems that parents face.Parenting practices to build good behavior and self-esteem.How to reinforce good behavior instead of bad behavior.Mentioned In This Episode:Self-Esteem in ChildrenHOW TO BUILD GOOD BEHAVIOR AND SELF-ESTEEM IN CHILDREN: Schlinger Jr., Dr. Henry D.
6/20/202336 minutes, 38 seconds
Episode Artwork

#128: Autism and Adoption- A Discussion with Rita Soronen

Rita Soronen is a National Child Welfare Advocate working with the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption (DTFA). She advocates for the abused, neglected, and vulnerable children in the foster care and juvenile justice system. There are 117,000 children in North America freed for adoption and 77% of those children have some sort of medically identified need, including autism. These children belong to a special division of DTFA, Wendy’s Wonderful Kids. This division is an initiative to advocate for and support children most at risk of aging out of the foster care system—teenagers, sibling groups, and those with special needs.During this conversation, Rita not only explains the wonderful work done for these children but also shares a story of hope. CJ is a child with autism who was adopted at age 9 by a loving and caring adoptive mom, D. Now 20 years old, CJ, who was nonverbal at the time of adoption, is thriving as a college student and productive adult. 1 in 36 children has autism, and there are many children in the child welfare system with an autism diagnosis or other special needs that need support and care. You can learn more by visiting the Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption website or calling their information hotline. #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:The Dave Thomas Foundation for Adoption.An initiative for children most at risk in the child welfare systems.CJ’s Story: A story of hope for children with autism awaiting adoption.Advocating for special needs children in the foster care system.Mentioned In This Episode:Dave Thomas FoundationDave Thomas Foundation for Adoption on FacebookCall: 1-800-ASK-DTFA
6/13/202323 minutes, 14 seconds
Episode Artwork

#127: An Inspiring Autism Journey with Sandy and Ben Hartranft

What a pleasure it was to have Sandy and Ben Hartranft on the show! Sandy is the proud mom of three sons, one of whom is Ben. Ben is 24 years old and was diagnosed with autism at the age of 2.20+ years ago, Sandy knew something was off, limited speech and no response to his name led her to pursue check-ins with her son’s doctors and an official appointment with a developmental pediatrician. Soon, it all came together, and the signs began to make sense with his new-found diagnosis. Ben found support through early intervention and through the rest of his school years with OTs, SLPs, The Talk Institute, and even his bus driver, who helped him make a plan to get on the regular education bus. When you hear what Ben is up to now, you will be amazed! He has been on the Ellen show, worked extensively with the Philadelphia Eagles and their autism advocacy events, and gone on solo trips, including cross country to California to win big on The Price is Right! He even owns his own company, Benergy. In which he provides presentations and public speeches for organizations to spread awareness and advocacy for autism.This duo is full of inspiration, kindness, and positivity. You can check out Sandy’s book, Swinging From the Chandelier: Finding Joy in the Journey through Autism, for more of the story of this incredible family.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Sandy and Ben’s journey through autism.A story of inspiration, kindness, and positivity.Getting an autism diagnosis in the 90s.Benergy; Ben’s public speaking company for autism awareness.Opportunities and possibilities for adults with autism.Mentioned In This Episode:Ben Hartranft Join our Start Communicating Today Live Course On June 20th and June 21st from 7-9:30 pm est. Register here. 
6/6/202327 minutes, 42 seconds
Episode Artwork

#126: Using an Assent Based Model For Intervention with Liz Lefebre

This isn’t the first time we’ve talked about Assent on the show. But today we’re focusing on what it is. Why is it important? And how do you know if you’re using an Assent Based Model? Liz Lefebre is a precision teacher and BCBA passionate about high quality behavior and educational services.So what is Assent? The goal of an Assent Based Model is a person-centered approach to assessment, intervention, and all other decision-making. In this model, the learner's assent withdrawal from participation is honored, whether it be a vocal 'no' or a non-vocal expression of verbal behavior.Liz describes it as having various components: Designing a program based on learner values, measuring engagement and Assent withdrawal, teaching and reinforcing assent withdrawal, as well as creating boundaries for safety and respect. Check out Liz’s hot off the press checklist to analyze your current therapy and see if you are incorporating an Assent Based Model. What do you need to shift and change? She includes examples and non examples to clarify these subtle components and how they should be embedded.If you’re ready for the first steps toward embedding an Assent Based Model in your therapy sessions, Liz has some tips.See her guide and checklist and take a good look at the current state of therapy.Take it one piece at a time. Make small changes as you can, it might be too heavy of a lift to change it all at once.Finally, listen and learn about the “Anti-ABA Movement”. Understand the harm caused by past ABA experiences so you can be a part of the change!When we know better, we do better. Assent is a crucial part of doing better, as my goal for therapy is to keep things fun AND functional!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:—What is Assent?—A new guide to analyze how you’re using Assent in therapy.—The first steps for embedding an Assent Based Model.—The importance of learner values and interests in therapy.Mentioned In This Episode:Assent Based Treatment ChecklistOctave-TrainingAssent ConferenceStart Communicating Today Webinar
5/30/202332 minutes, 11 seconds
Episode Artwork

#125: The Importance of Occupational Therapy with Dr. Kelle DeBoth Foust

Dr. Kelle DeBoth Foust is one of my best friends; we’ve been friends for over 15 years. She is an Occupational Therapist and an Associate Professor of OT at Cleveland State University. She has a passion for working with children with autism and other developmental disabilities and today she shares her wealth of knowledge with us.What is Occupational Therapy? No, it has nothing to do with helping people find jobs! Dr. DeBoth Foust describes it as therapy to regain the skills necessary for meaningful activities or occupational roles. This is a skill or activity that you LOVE to do and the foundational skills necessary to help you do it. For kids and young learners, this is commonly play or school participation.Occupational Therapists work frequently with sensory processing disorders and help use sensory integration for regulation. Dr. DeBoth Foust talks about "sensory diets,” which are strict schedules for sensory activities, and how these can sometimes not be very helpful. Working with sensory issues needs to be totally individualized, and teachers need to “be a detective” to see what triggers or helps students. Students should have some choice and be able to self identify how they feel and what they need to regulate. We also discuss a hot topic I love; collaboration. As we are all highly trained in our fields and we want what's best for the learner, collaboration can be tough if we don't fully understand each other's roles. When it comes to BCBAs and OTs collaborating, they can often butt heads because it might feel like OTs are reinforcing problem behaviors with sensory integration. Dr. DeBoth Foust explains it well when she says, "Not every behavior problem is a sensory issue and not every sensory issue is a behavior problem”. Dr. DeBoth Foust and her work focus on increasing engagement and participation in play! You can find out more about her work through CSU or the program PLAAY on the Move.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What is Occupational Therapy?What school is required to become an OT?Common goals and skills OTs practice.What are sensory processing disorders?What is a sensory diet?What are the barriers to collaboration with BCBAs and OTs?Mentioned In This Episode:PLAAY on the MoveKelle Kathleen DeBoth Foust, PhD, OTR/L
5/23/202332 minutes, 45 seconds
Episode Artwork

#124: Burnout - A Conversation with Jasmine Yepez

It’s May, and it can be a time when a lot of stress and overwhelm can be occurring. How do you know when you’re headed toward burnout? What do you do?Jasmine Yepez, The ABA Lady, is passionate about burnout and mental health advocacy for professionals and shares with me today her journey to healing after experiencing burnout. Burnout can be caused by a variety of things, like unhealthy boundaries with work. Are you consistently bringing work home with you? Checking your email during your time off? It can also be caused by a work environment that perpetuates negativity or overwork. Do they not help you set boundaries? Do they require work out of the office or during time off? Do they set unreasonable expectations? Whether it’s one or a combination, if you’re starting to feel burnout symptoms, you need to make some changes.Jasmine was in a position where she needed to take a break from the field. You may also feel that it is necessary, or you might feel that with additional steps, you can work through the burnout. Work through and heal burnout:Seek support: talk with a trusted supervisor, friend, or family member.Seek therapy: ACT, or Cognitive Behavior Therapy can be especially helpful.Learn about burnout: find books, podcasts, and social media accounts that can guide your journey.Pursue personal identity: Dive into a passion project (like Jasmine with wedding planning!) or spend time doing hobbies you love outside of work.If you’re new to the field or coming back from a break due to mental health, what can you do to ensure your employer has a positive culture that won’t lead to burnout? Jasmine shares some great questions and considerations for interviewing that can help you find the right employer.What are the leaders like? Do they foster collaboration and communication throughout the WHOLE team?What is the work life balance? Ask for actual policies and expectations!What is the PTO policy? Is time off REALLY time off? Are you expected to make up for billable hours?What is the turnover rate? A position with high turnover may not be a place with a positive environment.As you head into a busy and often stressful season, put yourself first! Have the care, compassion, and patience you would have for your clients for yourself as well! It is okay to take care of yourself, and it is always okay to question your job, there may even be ways you can use your certification that you haven't even considered yet! #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:Burnout care and prevention.Burnout symptoms, what to look for?Mental health advocacy for ABA professionals.How to heal from burnout.Questions to ask to ensure a positive work culture from future employers.Mentioned In This Episode:@TheABALady on Instagram
5/16/202332 minutes, 32 seconds
Episode Artwork

#123: Acceptance and Commitment Therapy with Kody Harms

You may have heard of the term "ACT," or Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, before, but this is a new topic for the show! I was so excited to learn about this impactful therapy approach from BCBA Kody Harms. What is ACT? Acceptance and Commitment Therapy is all about accepting that variables and challenging things will occur in life, but developing mental flexibility through positive values can be overcome. As a therapist working with parents, teachers, and other professionals engaged in the special education community, Kody found this to be the strongest force, especially with post- COVID concerns. He focuses especially on those that will have an impact on children with special needs.The approach to this therapy involves action based sessions. Creating daily actions to reflect who you want to be and systematic goals based on your environment. During intake, you have a values assessment to understand who you are and what you want to be. And weekly check-ins involving a health score from 1-10. The idea is that a healthier mind and mental space lead to more positive outcomes and change toward your goals. You can expect role play, narrative exercises, and other tactics that drive towards an overall shift toward a positive mindset.Whether you’re a mom looking to be a better, more positive parent towards your special needs child or a professional working towards handling contentious situations with special needs children and their parents, ACT can be a really healthy and balanced way to reach those goals. Before we close, Kody shares his 5 second rule when it comes to when you don’t really want to do something. I know I am going to use this right away!You can find out more about Kody and ACT therapy with Curated Family Therapeutics online at their website and Instagram.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What is ACT?The power of positive values and mindset.What is the ‘5 Second Rule’?What is Mental Flexibility?Traditional ABA vs ACT.Mentioned In This Episode:Curated Family TherapeuticsCFT InstagramGet Your Free Autism Toolbox
5/9/202328 minutes, 56 seconds
Episode Artwork

#122: Survival Tips For Contentious IEP Meetings

Whether you are a seasoned professional, parent, or brand new to the field, IEP meetings are a reality when it comes to school based settings. With over 20 years of experience, I have 5 top tips to keep you positive, prepared, and confident no matter the tone of the meeting. Have your special education director or administrator present - Sometimes lawyers and advocates are going to attend the meeting, in that event, make sure you have support on your side beyond your building principal.Complete a robust assessment AND/OR be comfortable with most recent assessment - Check out my prior episode on assessments like the PFA, Rossetti, VB-Mapp, Communication Matrix, and more. Include baseline data - This demonstrates a need for a goal. Be specific with accuracy and dates to track goals and progress. Send a draft home for a review - I recommend a week prior, but every district is different. The parent needs a chance to review and give feedback with their home team, and then you have a chance to receive and consider that feedback prior to the meeting or be prepared to discuss more during the IEP.Be prepared, remain calm, be professional, and seek help - You deserve to be treated with respect and do not have to accept verbal abuse, even during difficult and contentious IEP meetings.If you ever need extra support, whether you’re a parent or professional, I am here, and you can book a coaching call with me. Not every IEP meeting will be warm and fuzzy, but we can live in a world where we do not dread them! #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Do you dread IEP meetings?5 survival tips for a positive IEP meeting.When to seek support in an IEP meeting.What to know about assessments prior to an IEP meeting.Why is a draft SO important before an IEP meeting.Why do contentious IEP meetings occur?Mentioned In This Episode:Autism Outreach Podcast - Episode 54: Autism AssessmentsBook a coaching call with RoseGet Your Free Autism Toolbox
5/2/202329 minutes, 26 seconds
Episode Artwork

#121: Core Vocabulary and Typical Language Development with Allison Bean and Bethany Frick Semmler

One of my big goals with ABA Speech and The Autism Outreach Podcast is to disseminate information to help professionals stay in touch with the latest research and information in our field. When the article, Examining Core Vocabulary with Language Development for Early Symbolic Communicators, written by Dr. Allison Bean and Dr. Bethany Frick showed up in a professional Facebook group, I knew I had to know more.Let’s first start by breaking down the definition of the vocabulary discussed in this article and today’s episode.  Core Vocabulary is made up of 200–400 words that occur frequently across individuals, settings, and contexts - pronouns, verbs, auxiliary verbs, prepositions, and determiners (it, more, that, is).Fringe Vocabulary is all the other words specific to an individual or activity - mostly nouns. In their research, Dr. Bean and Dr. Semmler examined 7 core vocabulary lists, looking at the composition of the list, what portion were nouns/verbs/etc and when they are acquired under typical development. They found the lists to very well match the definitions in our field, and the majority of words were acquired by typical language learners from ages 25 - 66 months. As we discuss the findings from their research, we consider how practitioners are choosing, using, and teaching words to AAC learners. AAC is still critical language development, just with a different modality. It is crucial to continue to use your clinical expertise and training in language development as you are choosing words and teaching your AAC users.At some point in time, every single SLP will encounter a learner who uses AAC. How are you developing their language? How are you choosing meaningful words specific to the learner?Dr. Bean and Dr. Semmler get to the heart of these important questions and have a great discussion about this important research! #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What is core vocabulary?What is fringe vocabulary?How to choose specific and meaningful words for your AAC user?AAC users and language development.Core vocabulary and acquisition with typical language development. Mentioned In This Episode:Thank you to our sponsor LINGGO. For more information, visit  www.linggo.com or contact info@linggo.comAllison F. Bean | Department of Speech and Hearing Science (osu.edu)ABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
4/25/202334 minutes, 8 seconds
Episode Artwork

#120: All Things Research - A Talk with Dr. Amber Valentino

When you are post-certification and become a practitioner, it can be difficult to stay in touch with the latest research. Dr. Amber Valentino, Chief Clinical Officer at Trumpet Behavioral Health, discusses some of the ways to break beyond the barriers of research as a clinician and make ABA research more accessible.Dr. Valentino wrote a paper with her colleague, Jessica Juanico, on the barriers to research for practitioners who had a real desire to continue research during their field careers. This was the inspiration for her book, Applied Behavior Analysis Research Made Easy: A Handbook for Practitioners Conducting Research Post-Certification.  Dr. Valentino expresses the importance and place for field research that looks different, may be less structured, and embraces the mess that is everyday clinic work. I’ve set a goal for myself to read three journal articles a week because learning and disseminating information are important to me. Dr. Valentino shares some ways she recommends creating digestible goals to consume research, like “lit in a min” and time blocking.We also talk a bit about public speaking. Whether you are live on socials, a podcast, an IEP, or a parent meeting, speaking can be nerve wracking. She says to prepare, practice, and know your audience. That is the best way to soothe your nerves and nail your talk!You can find out more about Dr. Amber Valentino and her work by visiting the website for Trumpet Behavioral Health or checking out her personal website, Behavioral-Mom.  #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What should you be doing to help your clients?Sticking to evidence based practice and research in therapyStrategies for staying in touch with literature and current research.Public speaking as a provider.Mentioned In This Episode:Behavior MomTrumpet Behavioral HealthABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUsThank you to our sponsor LINGGO. For more information, visit www.linggo.com or contact info@linggo.com 
4/18/202336 minutes, 11 seconds
Episode Artwork

#119: The Importance of Joy In Therapy with Jennifer Posey

Have you ever met a provider, with a “Sit down! Do your work! Kids need to listen!” mentality? Jennifer Posey is a BCBA and adjunct professor at Endicott College. In this episode, she shares about her new tool, the Joy Index, which is currently in the research and peer review process.The Joy Index is a tool that measures assent, autonomy, embedded choice, and relationship building. It involves 32 indicators with yes or no answers that can be used by parents and professionals. As providers, our goal is to have a positive impact, but there are those who have raised concerns about the practice of ABA. This tool is to keep those concerns in check and ensure we are creating a joyful experience in therapy. Honor the learner, follow their lead, provide choice in play materials and instruction, these are all parts of the dance between instructor and child to create a meaningful interaction. The Joy Index is currently under peer review, so stay tuned for future information on this incredible tool. Contact Jennifer Posey via email and look out for her at upcoming conferences this year. #autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:What is the Joy index?Honoring the learner in every therapy session.A field with the goal to create positive change.Active strategies to create joy in therapy.What does joy in therapy look like?What is assent and what does it mean?Mentioned In This Episode:jposey@endicott.edu ABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUsThank you to our sponsor LINGGO. For more information, visit www.linggo.com or contact info@linggo.com.
4/11/202335 minutes, 44 seconds
Episode Artwork

#118: From Diagnosis to Intervention- A Conversation With Zulekha Williams

Don’t Wait! That’s the advice from Zulekha Williams when it comes to taking action for concerns with your child’s development. I met Zulekha over on TikTok; she is a great mom who is fighting for the needs of her children and sharing her journey along the way.As a member of the helping profession, Zulekha wasted no time when it came to getting support for her son when she started noticing early signs of autism. Before his diagnosis, she was seeing signs like delayed motor skills, no eye tracking, limited awareness, no sense of danger, and no speech. She immediately started speech and other therapies before completing the M-CHAT on her own and bringing it to her doctor.Alongside speech therapy for her speech delayed 2-year-old, Zulekha has quite the journey securing the right therapy and services for her sons. Between ABA therapy, speech therapy, telehealth, school, and even issues with allowing AAC in the school, she had to seek out the help of another TikTok creator, The IEP Strategist. If you’re having similar experiences when it comes to speech services or AAC, check out the Communication Bill of Rights on ASHA.During our conversation, you can hear the passion Zulekha has for her children. Her story and tips for services and creating communication with your children are such an inspiration for any family!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:A TikTok Mom sharing her family’s Autism and Therapy journey.Noticing early signs of autism and developmental delays.Advocating for therapy and other services.Using AAC and other communication tools in the home.Therapy services in a small town, navigating in-home therapy and telehealth.Can you get your Speech and ABA therapists to collaborate?Mentioned In This Episode:Communication Bill of RightsZulekha Williams on TikTokABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
4/4/202338 minutes, 24 seconds
Episode Artwork

#117: Compassionate Parent Training with Leanne Page

“In all communication, aim first to understand”. This is the first bullet from Leanne Page’s Parent Training Checklist. Leanne is a BCBA, parent coach, author, continuing ed provider, and mom of 2. In this episode, she is sharing some impactful points on this step to step guide for Compassionate Parent Training.Did you know that a study showed just 40 seconds of compassion from a doctor drastically improved patient outcomes? Oftentimes communications with parents can occur only when problems arise or to update goals and IEPS but Parent Training is actually a monthly service usually covered by insurance. Not only can this provide better client outcomes but it can impact and support the whole family. Leanne uses thoughtful and clever tips in this checklist to dance the fine line of communication, covering goals and meeting them where they are at. Find yourself having trouble getting through a conversation with a parent. Use a pause wisely and remember, WAIT - Why Am I Talking? This gives you both a chance to reset.With Parenting with ABA, Leannae offers membership and CEUs through monthly training and book studies covering empathy, compassion, and other trauma information resources based on ABA research. You can find out more about her and Compassionate Parent Training through her website! #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What is Compassionate Parent Training?How can monthly parent training impact families?A Parent Training Checklist to help providers.Information on Parenting with ABA: Training, Studies, and CEUs.Relating a variety of empathy, compassion, and trauma-informed resources to ABA research.Mentioned In This Episode:Parenting with ABA ABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
3/28/202329 minutes, 19 seconds
Episode Artwork

#116: Collaboration and AAC with Barb Weber

We all know collaboration can be tricky when it comes to working across many fields of expertise, especially with a shared tool like AAC. Today I am delighted to have Barb Weber as my guest. Barb is an SLP, BCBA, author, and AAC specialist. When it comes to AAC, especially considering the differences in AAC training for SLPs and BCBAs, navigating collaborating can be hard. Barb emphasizes the importance of matching the AAC device to the skills and relevant activities of the user. She also notes that the person whose voice it is and their close circle should be involved in the decision-making process. Functional and socially relevant vocabulary should be prioritized, taking into account different perspectives from the SLP, BCBA, teacher, and family.There is a fine line between collaborating and “too many cooks in the kitchen”. Barbs asks the question; whose device is it? It is crucial to manage the device with agreed-upon procedures and involve one programmer who considers the communication and thoughts of all providers. But the most essential piece is to remember who we are serving, always supporting and honoring the user's needs.Difficult conversations are part of the process, Barb actually calls this an important skill for therapy providers. She recommends that providers learn how to say hard things to ensure they are providing the best possible care. Negativity can circulate in areas of collaboration, but you can combat that by always talking to everybody and building opportunities with different perspectives.Our conversation might help your collaboration go smoothly and even avoid disagreements, but if they do happen consider these tips: Have a direct (maybe difficult) conversationGathering information to understand the perspectiveSummarizing the discussion and informing the teamDocumenting and building a history of decision-makingThis was great information from Barb who is a member of ASHA’s SIG 12. I hope these tips can help you in your practice and collaborating with other providers on your journey to help your learners!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:How to navigate AAC collaboration?Remembering the user of the AAC device: Whose device is it?Using common vocabulary to create common ground.Managing AAC devices with agreed-upon procedures.How to handle difficult conversations with other providersAddressing disagreement among providers effectively.Mentioned In This Episode:Special Interest Group 12, Augmentative and Alternative CommunicationABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
3/21/202330 minutes, 35 seconds
Episode Artwork

#115: Early Intervention Speech Therapy Services - A Talk With Cindy Watson

In this conversation with Pediatric SLP Cindy Watson, you can just see the passion she has for helping young learners communicate and find their voice. When Cindy first receives a new Early Intervention case she calls on the parent to talk through the reasons and concerns that led them there and another simple but IMPACTFUL thing…what does the child like? These things establish rapport and give Cindy the tools to enter the first Early Intervention session as she calls “the fun aunt.”Cindy’s top favorite toys and tools for initiating play and communication are among my own with Bubbles, Books, Blocks, and other open-ended toys. Arkansas where Cindy’s center, Children’s Therapy TEAM is a bagless state which encourages therapists to enter homes with no outside resources and take advantage of the child’s natural environment so that parents can keep up the work outside of therapy.When assessing new toddlers for Early Intervention Cindy starts out with play, observation, and conversations with caregivers. For formal assessments, she uses the Preschool Language Scale and the Rossetti Infant Toddler Language Scale. Cindy shares my view on the importance and power of communication and shares a few key focuses she thinks therapists and families at home should consider when working on speech:Cause and effect communicationReinforcing languageGesturesJoint attentionBuilding on milestonesNot only does Cindy do incredible work with young children in Early Intervention, but her center also has a really amazing mentorship program for their therapists to give them the tools and confidence to do their best work. You can find out more about Cindy and The Children’s Therapy Team on their website and Facebook.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:How should you begin a new Early Intervention case?Top toys, tools, and resources for Early Intervention Therapy.What assessments should you use in Early Intervention with young learners?What skills and ideas should therapists and families focus on to build communication?A unique and powerful mentorship program for new therapists.Mentioned In This Episode:Children’s Therapy TEAMChildren's Therapy Team on Facebookcindy.watson@childrensteam.com ABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
3/14/202340 minutes, 37 seconds
Episode Artwork

#114: What is Trauma Informed Care?

I am speaking with Rachel Archambault, the PTSD SLP. Rachel was present on Valentine's day 2018, when a mass shooting occurred in her workplace, Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland Florida. This experience led her to curate and cultivate resources for her trauma-affected students, and provide therapy with Trauma Informed Care.Trauma Informed Care hallmarks on: Realizing trauma is present, Recognizing the effects, Responding to the trauma and its effects, and avoiding Retraumatization.  Rachel uses the 6 pillars of Trauma Informed Care to guide her approach:SafetyChoiceCollaborating and MutualityTrust and TransparencyEmpowermentCultural, Historical, and Gender IssuesDuring our discussion, Rachel provides situations and insights that can guide your care to ensure no student is at risk of trigger or re-traumatization. Whether they were a part of a traumatizing national event or a smaller personal trauma, all trauma is equal and every person deserves to be protected. With her advice today, it is clear that this initiative takes a mindset shift that has benefits to everyone you come in contact with. For more information check out the resources Rachel provided in today’s episode along with finding her on her Instagram @PTSD.SLP.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What is Trauma Informed Care?What are the 6 Pillars of Trauma Informed Care?Why all trauma should be protected.Can you use Trauma Informed Care in speech therapy?How to avoid retraumatization, tips and ideas.How to shift your mindset to protect others.Mentioned In This Episode:What Happened to You?: Conversations on Trauma, Resilience, and HealingTrauma InformedPTSD Resources for SLPs | FacebookRachel A. | The SLP W/ PTSD  - InstagramABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
3/7/202335 minutes, 58 seconds
Episode Artwork

#113: Supporting Autistic Learners Who Use AAC To Communicate

When it comes to supporting students using AAC devices… Are you Intimidated? Overwhelmed? Unsure? Unprepared? In this episode, I am digging into my tool belt of 21+ years of experience and sharing my top 5 strategies to use to support autistic learners using AAC devices!Know this Document -> The Communication Bill of Rights! Be aware of this empowering document and print out and even share it with the people in your learner's orbit. Listen in for some specific and important rights for our learners and their voice.Understand the Device: Sounds simple? Maybe, but there will often be *new to you* technology and programs. Take the initiative and the time to learn it and understand! You need to be an expert so you can help not only your learner but the others involved in their care. Seek out AAC experts in your district, find online tutorials, and get educated by company representatives!Model Using the Device: Everyone in our learners' environment needs to understand that the device is absolutely essential. Model for other teachers and therapists so all providers can be aware and help your learner. Show how the device can be used across the day.Train Others: People shouldn’t be afraid of AAC devices. It’s a big part of your responsibility to make sure everyone is educated about a device, its rights, and how to use it. Tie it into compliance with the IEP. Try fitting it into PD, training days, or late start days!Keep Generalization in Mind: How is this important in a larger school environment? At home? In the community? This skill is important enough to take time to work on because it moves beyond the therapy room and will last across environments and lifespans.Help me reach my goal of making sure ALL autistic learners have a voice! Like, share, and leave a review on this podcast!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Tools and tips for supporting students using AACWhat is The Communication Bill of Rights?Troubleshooting misuse of AACUnderstanding and modeling AAC.How to train others on AAC.Mentioned In This Episode:Episode 108: The Power of No with Lisa WallaceSocial skills game for mixed groups - ABA SpeechBoom Cards: Social Skills- Let's Talk: Visual Conversation ABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
2/28/202330 minutes, 5 seconds
Episode Artwork

#112: Practical Functional Assessment with Dr. Cory Whelan

​​Dr. Corey Whelan, SLP-BCBA joins me in this episode to discuss a really important assessment for autistic individuals that can add to compassionate care across the lifespan.Practical Function Assessment (PFA) is a process aimed at understanding individuals and the barriers they face in therapy. The goal of PFA is to provide a treatment plan via a skills-based therapy process that will prevent unsafe behavior and help clients reach their optimal learning environment. The first step in PFA is an open-ended interview to learn about the individual and their barriers. The information gathered in the interview is then synthesized into an Interview-Informed Synthesized Contingency Analysis (IISCA) to move forward with the assessment.PFA allows for the safe evaluation of dangerous behavior without the need to witness it. Instead, the focus is on reinforcing non-dangerous, early responses in the chain of behavior, with the ultimate goal of providing a skills-based therapy process to treat problematic behavior. Three critical skills are emphasized in treatment with the PFA: functional communication training, tolerating disappointment when a response is not reinforced, and cooperating with adult-directed instruction during a delay.Behavior Analysts looking for training in PFA can do so through online courses or by seeking mentorship from the center of the company they work with. PFA is ideal for individuals who are making minimal gains in therapy but behavior barriers remain a concern, or for new clients engaging in problem behavior prior to starting therapy.It's important to note that the purpose of PFA is not to understand why a behavior is occurring, but to treat it and prevent it, leading to more effective therapy. By breaking through barriers, individuals can access their optimal learning environment, allowing them to make the most of their therapy sessions.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What are the PFA and the steps involved?How IISCA influences therapy response.Three critical skills for treatment after PFA.Breaking barriers and providing access to the optimal therapy environment. Mentioned In This Episode:VinfenPractical Functional AssessmentABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
2/21/202330 minutes, 40 seconds
Episode Artwork

#111: Matrix Training with Dr. Sarah Frampton

Dr. Sarah Frampton, an assistant professor at the University of Nebraska - Omaha joins me today as we discuss her work with Matrix Training. Dr. Frampton also refers to it as Matrix “Planning”, this is a generative approach to therapy that can help learners acquire new skills and improve their communication.Matrix Training involves arranging words in a matrix so that some multi-word phrases are taught directly, while others emerge through indirect teaching. This approach involves creating a table of related targets and components and then moving forward with training and probing. The key benefit of this approach is the ability to identify and prevent faulty stimulus control in tact training.Age is not a barrier to using Matrix Training because it is based on a solid foundation. This approach is best suited for learners who are acquiring single-component tacts and listening skills, with a provider who has found a teaching style and process that works best for them. Learners who will find Matrix Training most effective are typically at Level 2 of the VB-Mapp or around 18 to 30 months developmentally. The basics of Matrix Training are simply selecting targets, teaching targets, and then assessing targets. There are no restrictions on how to use and teach with Matrix Training, and it can be embedded into a naturalistic teaching context or any other context that works best for the student.Dr. Frampton emphasizes that Matrix Training is a systematic and science-based tool that can be incredibly effective for therapy planning. When done well, therapy sessions can even look and feel like play. #autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:The benefit of Matrix Training and Planning.How to prevent faulty stimulus control in tact training.A systematic approach to selecting, teaching, and assessing targets.Science-based tool for therapy planning.Mentioned In This Episode:Sarah Frampton | Department of Psychology | University of Nebraska OmahaABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
2/14/202336 minutes, 31 seconds
Episode Artwork

#110: The Ethics of Collaboration with Dr. Dana Battaglia and Dr. Mary McDonald

Dr. Dana Battaglia, SLP, and Dr. Mary McDonald, BCBA, have been working together and collaborating throughout their career. Collaboration in the two fields is slowly making progress but there is still a lot of polarity for a lot of professionals. They rely on their strong commitment to science and evidence-based practice to guide their collaboration.Dr. McDonald references the Ethics Code of Behavior Analysis codes, 2.10, 3.01, and 3.06. 2.10 Collaborating with ColleaguesBehavior analysts collaborate with colleagues from their own and other professions in the best interests of clients and stakeholders. Behavior analysts address conflicts by compromising when possible and always prioritizing the best interests of the client. Behavior analysts document all actions taken in these circumstances and their eventual outcomes.3.01 Responsibility to ClientsBehavior analysts act in the best interest of clients, taking appropriate steps to support clients' rights, maximize benefits, and do no harm. They are also knowledgeable about and comply with applicable laws and regulations related to mandated reporting requirements.3.06 Consulting with Other ProvidersBehavior analysts arrange for appropriate consultation with and referrals to other providers in the best interests of their clients, with appropriate informed consent, and in compliance with applicable requirements (e.g., laws, regulations, contracts, organization, and funder policies).The bottom line is to ask yourself, what is in the best interest of the client. When you don't know what you don't know and you have access to a professional with the knowledge and skills needed for your case, it is important to have humility, stick to the science, and consult them.Dr. Battaglia and Dr. McDonald's collaboration across their professions maximize their outcomes and increase the benefit of the client. They share some strategies and tips to help other SLPs and BCBAs open to collaboration and see the same great results.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:The ethics of collaboratingCase studies featuring verbal imitation and PECSCollaborating with SLPS and BCBASStrategies for collaboration to use in your practiceMentioned In This Episode:Dr. Mary McDonalddbattagliaslp@gmail.comDana Battaglia, Ph.D. (@Dana_Battaglia1) / TwitterEden II ProgramsABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
2/7/202329 minutes, 20 seconds
Episode Artwork

#109: The Power of SLP and BCBA Collaboration with Lynn M. Dudek

If you succeed, I succeed. That really culminates in the importance of SLP and BCBA collaboration, but as we've discussed on the show in the past…it can still be really challenging.Lynn Dudek, owner of ASD SLP, and a fellow SLP-BCBA "unicorn". She shares her experiences in the field with stories coming from the late 80s and early 90s that dive into the history and changes we've seen in the SLP, BCBA, and autism fields. A pivotal moment in her career was a "dream dinner party" as I joke, where she picked the brains of Dr. Vince Carbone and Dr. Patrick McGreevy. Throughout her career as an SLP and eventually, as a BCBA, she was faced with the opportunity to work and collaborate with other BCBAs and SLPs.Lynn shares somewhat of a case study of a collaboration interaction that really went well on the topic of verbal imitation. This concept with Echoics can be a touchy subject between the fields, but because the BCBA Lynn was working with was open to understanding Lynn's expertise on speech development, they were able to agree and move forward for the better of the learner.Common Challenges for Collaboration:-Understanding the role and expertise of the professional…who really "knows best?"-The language barrier… academic language and terms between the two professions can differ greatlyPositive Strategies for Collaboration:-Be open: create an open line of communication, you are both well-educated, trained professionals with specific expertise.-Demystify the language: when possible use plain language that everyone can understand, or explicitly explain academic terms-Pair first: we always talk about "pairing first" with our learners… take the time to pair with the other professional. Make a connection and show interest, it can smooth the edges of future disagreements.When we work together we can do such amazing things, not just for the child but for the professionals on the team. #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:A brief history of SLPs and BCBAsA “case study” on verbal imitation.Common challenges for collaboration between SLPs and BCBAs.Positive collaboration strategiesMentioned In This Episode:lynn.dudek@asdslp.comABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
1/31/202337 minutes, 56 seconds
Episode Artwork

#108: The Power of No with Lisa Wallace

No. No, thank you. I don’t want to. I don’t like this. These are important statements that communicate that you do not want something to happen.  In this episode, Lisa Wallace an SLP who has worked with young children with autism and their families for over 25 years talks about this important yet overlooked skill of communicating “no.”No may look like a variety of things depending on the activity and the child’s communication level. Clear signals might be verbally saying no, giving back or throwing an item, running away, crying, and in some cases severe problem behaviors. Other more subtle symptoms might be withdrawal, the closing of eyes, turning away, and disengagement. Effective communication of “no” should be a goal for every child, regardless of how they are currently communicating it. To assess where to start, Lisa recommends using observational informal assessment, taking notes, and talking to the caretaker. What triggers a “no” response? What does “no” mean to them? What does “no” look like to them?Lisa talks about working towards this goal in a mildly challenging way because there often are no provided opportunities to communicate “no”. Especially, if you have a child who is happily engaged in every activity. Or alternatively, you have a child who, provoking a “no” activity might cause triggering, dangerous behavior. Tips for “Practicing Protesting”-Provoke in a Mildly Challenging Situation (Avoid high stakes situations)-Set antecedents, what are going to be the causes of the “no”?-Provide visuals, AAC, or other familiar communication tools. -Ready to model. Show the learner what communicating “no” looks like.-Use the correct reinforcement: Removal of antecedent. You want the child to know and understand that when they communicate “no” or “I don’t want to” or “Not like this”, their communication is going to be validated. Do not continue doing the “no” activity in any capacity. This is such a great topic, and one I don’t think we discuss nearly enough. Saying “no” is an important piece of communication in helping our learners find their voice.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Why is communicating “no” so important?Creating goals based on communicating “no”.How to practice protesting in a supportive, non-triggering manner.What does “no” mean to each child?Observing clear or subtle “no” signals.Why saying “no” effectively should be a goal for every child.Mentioned In This Episode:ABA Speech: Learn About Current ASHA and ACE CEUs
1/24/202331 minutes, 43 seconds
Episode Artwork

#107: The Importance of Comprehension Skills with Dr. Merrill Winston

As SLPs and BCBAs we are tasked with teaching comprehension to our learners, but do they really understand these skills? Dr. Merrill Winston joined me to discuss not only reading comprehension but comprehension in everyday life and the building block skills to be successful.What is comprehension?Whether you're reading a book or listening to a statement, there are 3 markers for comprehension.Repeat it.Follow the Directions or Instructions within it.Talk about it.Dr. Winston and I get into the nitty gritty of that last marker and talk about it when it comes to a comprehension of daily life. He says that a major prerequisite for reading comprehension is comprehending their day. You can check this by having your learner sequence, or "serieate" their day. (First I did this, then I did this, then we did that…) With this skill, students are pulling information from the past and making a time reference. You can practice by working in smaller increments, like the last hour even.This doesn't have to be verbal, it can be in pictures or icons as well! But, the important thing is to ask those questions!! Students may not be able to serieate their day, simply because they aren't being asked these questions.We also talk about goal setting and realistic expectations. If you're considering setting a comprehension goal for your learner, Dr. Winston says to be sure to ask: What is the end goal? Where is this skill going to take them? Every skill you spend time on should have a goal that extends across the lifespan and opens more doors and opportunities. He even goes as far as to say that working on a goal for too long without progress is careless! This was such a great chat with a leader in the field of ABA, and I hope you found it helpful!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What does comprehension really mean?How should providers be working on comprehension?What is “seriating your day” and why is it important?Determining functional goals for your learners.How goals and skills build to reach larger goals.Goals that will impact your learner’s life.Mentioned In This Episode:Winston Behavioral SolutionsABASpeechByRose - Rose Griffin - InstagramABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource
1/17/202337 minutes, 58 seconds
Episode Artwork

#106: Supporting Students With Behavioral Barriers

Every October I send out a survey to find out what you all are struggling with. This year the top 2 answers were Engagement and Behavior Barriers. I talk about engagement often on the show, and in this episode, I am focusing on behavior barriers. If you’re trying to find ways to support your students who might have behavioral barriers or problem behaviors here are seven things to consider for preventing and handling these barriers:Service delivery - Where are your students receiving services? Classroom, Therapy office, Individual setting, group, etc.Staff support - Request support either with a behavior plan or with physical support from a paraprofessional or behavior technicianVisual Use visuals and familiar icons to help students know what to expect in your schedule and sessionHave your materials ready - Be prepared, and don’t leave time for gathering materials during your session… be ready to go, and keep your student engaged.Behavior Plan - Does your student have a behavior plan? Seek access to it or get the process started to create one.Fun and Functional - Embed student interests into the session, and be the giver of fun thingsAsk for help - The top priorities are for you to feel safe, the student to feel safe, and for intervention to take place…these things need to happen, advocate for them.I also recommend recording ABC data. Antecedent, Behavior, Consequence. Write down and track every occurrence of behavior and the correlating information. As time continues you will understand, notice a pattern, and begin to prevent these behaviors. I offer an ABC sheet in my course Help Me Find My Voice, but ABC sheets are readily available via web search.Not only is this podcast meant to help you give a voice to your learners, but also helps you have the confidence to reach and support all of your autistic students. If you found this helpful please subscribe so you don’t miss more important information you can put to use in your therapy room.#autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:How can you reach and engage students with behavioral barriers?How to approach behavioral barriers in therapy.7 things to consider when supporting students with behavior barriers.Giving the provider confidence to help ALL autistic students.Mentioned In This Episode:ABASpeechByRose - Rose Griffin - InstagramABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource
1/10/202327 minutes, 43 seconds
Episode Artwork

#105: Joint Attention Ideas For Toddlers

I love talking about joint attention, but a lot of my ideas and strategies in my courses may feel like they are geared toward older preschool-age students. My tips today are for the youngest learners, toddlers aged 2 to 3. Joint attention is an important foundational skill and it is never too early to get started with these strategies!3 Ways to Get Started with Joint Attention with Your Toddler TodayBooksBooks are the lifeline for learning and sharing activities and time with our little ones. For these young learners, when reading use a positive, energetic voice. Try using board books and interactive books with flaps. With your own child, make a goal to embed at least 15 minutes to read and interact with a book every day!Some of my favorites: Huggy Kissy and the Llama Llama series SongsUse YOUR Voice. Learn songs with motions to sing with your toddler. If toddlers aren't speaking they can join in by using the gestures and doing the motions as you sing. You can also use visuals like toys that match the song or printed visuals from my TPT store for early intervention songs.Some of my favorites: Wheels on the Bus, 5 Little Monkeys, Happy and You Know It, Old McDonaldPlayPlaying with toddlers is so fun and you never know what they will love and enjoy. Focus on not asking questions but just modeling simple language and narrating the activity.Some of my favorites: Bubbles, Sensory Bins, Cars with Tracks#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:3 ways you can work on joint attention at home today!Joint attention strategies for toddlers.Tips and tricks for embedding joint attention work in your day-to-day.How to read books, sing songs, and play with your child to assist with joint attention.Mentioned In This Episode:Books For Speech Therapy For ToddlersSongs for Early Intervention by ABA SPEECH | TPTABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource
1/3/202322 minutes
Episode Artwork

#104: Social Engagement with Young Autistic Learners - Dr. Jamie Hughes-Lika

We need to step back and wait so that the child has a chance to find their voice, whatever that looks like so that they can spontaneously and independently connect with us.Dr. Jamie Hughs-Lika is a BCBA-D, an Early Start Denver Model Certified Therapist, and has been working in the field for 26 years. We discussed what you can do when social engagement is difficult with your child or students and why is it so important to work on this skill.Social engagement and attention begin as early as infancy, with eye contact and small coos from your baby. When this isn’t present, and the pattern of limited social engagement continues, Dr. Hughs-Lika says differences in social attention are one of the first early signs of autism. Children with autism are less motivated to engage socially, and Dr. Hughs-Lika covers the three pillars of social motivation:Social Orientation: This is responding to communication and social attention with eye contact, gestures, etc.Social Seeking: This is initiating communication through gestures, imitation, showing toys or items, etc.Social Maintaining: This is ‘maintaining’ a social connection through turn-taking and social reciprocity. Dr. Hughs-Lika is also an autism mom and shares a little about her journey for connection with her son Liam. When she works with him and other children she “takes a pulse” of the interaction with these questions.What captures the child’s attention?What are the distractions?Where are the motivations?How close can I get to maintaining comfort in the activities?Are there interfering behaviors that are becoming inflexible or rigid?Social communication is the cornerstone of more advanced communication. Having fun, being positive, and building a personal connection with your child are important strategies for working on social engagement and communication. During our discussion, we talked about the assessments available, Dr. Hughs-Lika’s courses, and the nuance of working on this critical skill. You can find out more about her courses and other information by finding Sage Learning Systems on social media or visiting their websites.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Is social engagement an early sign of autism?What are the three pillars of social motivation?Available assessments for social skills.Strategies and Questions to guide interactions with your child or student. Mentioned In This Episode:—SAGE Learning Lab—Sage Learning Systems—Sage Learning Systems on Facebook—Chevalier et al article—Fun visuals for teaching strategies—ABA Speech: Home—ABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource
12/27/202245 minutes, 44 seconds
Episode Artwork

REPLAY: Autism Early Intervention- Joint Attention

“Rose, I am working with a student who is not engaging during therapy!”This is a message I get week after week from my listeners! So this week I am playing back my most listened episode of 2022, number 62, all about joint attention. I go over some key strategies to not only increase attention during therapy but help your child or client on their journey to communicationThese activities involve shared activities through playing with toys, singing songs, and reading books. It is okay if your student isn't ready to fully engage when you introduce these activities, note their baseline data, and move forward with goals. You will be amazed to see the transformation and excitement over these simple activities.Toys:Playing with toys in therapy is all about creating an interaction in a semi-structured environment. Remember to use simple language and allow for natural curiosity and play and not bombard with questions. Examples of toys I love to use:Car and car track Mini ObjectsFarm SetLiteracy:Build excitement around the book, use books with repetition, and if your kids like it try an animated voice which can be really fun.A few books I love to keep in my therapy bag that are a great success for joint attention are, Pete the Cat and his White Shoes, Brown Bear, The Very Hungry Caterpillar, and Chicka Chicka Boom Boom.Music:Students love songs, they are familiar, and create engagement. I also love to use visuals that can be just laminated pictures or little toys that match the activity of the song. It can also be engaging to sing songs that have motions for the words.Songs I love:Old MacdonaldWheels on the BusHead, Shoulders, Knees, and ToesIt can be difficult to keep data and set goals around these abstract ideas, be sure to check out my goal bank on ABA speech. I hope you love these ideas and get use out of them in your next therapy session!#autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:How to increase learner engagement?What is joint attention?How to embed joint attention across a student's day.Where to start with joint attention.Integrating shared activities into therapy.Why should you focus on the connection before communication?Mentioned In This Episode:IEP Goals for Students with Autism - ABA SpeechABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource
12/20/202233 minutes, 46 seconds
Episode Artwork

#102: Strategies for SLP and BCBA Collaboration with AAC (Janna Bedoyan & Morgan van Diepen)

Any chance to talk about collaboration, I am all about it! Janna Bedoyan and Morgan van Diepen are experienced members of the autism field. Janna is an NBCT teacher who specializes in Augmentative and Alternative Communication and Morgan is a BCBA and autism specialist. As I talk to these two today, their passion is just incredible.Together, Janna and Morgan have just published a new book, AAC Visualized - a visual guide for AAC full of detailed pictures, examples, ideas, and strategies. The mission behind AAC Visualized is to normalize the use of AAC, advocate for acceptance and access to AAC, and empower families through AAC education. In the creation of this book, they collaborated with SLPs, Teachers, Autistic Individuals, and AAC users to get an all-encompassing view on AAC. Janna and Morgan make it clear that it is NOT SLP versus ABA but instead there is a clear need for collaboration between the two. AAC is typically taught and used with SLPs but it's important for ABA providers to put it to use during therapy as well for these users. They share some of their tips and strategies from their book!3 Essential Tips for ABA Providers Teaching AACFollow the SLPs LeadMoving Beyond RequestsUse AAC to Teach AACBe sure to check out their book AAC Visualized and the "sister" book ABA Visualized. You can find Morgan and Janna on Instagram to check out all of the cool things they are doing in their field!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:3 essential tips for ABA providers teaching AAC.Introducing a visual guide to normalize, advocate, and empower AAC.How modeling AAC can familiarize staff and users with AAC devices.Unique strategies for AAC and ABA.How to collaboratively support and empower students.It’s not SLP vs ABA.Mentioned In This Episode: Shop AAC VisualizedAAC Specialist & Consultant (@aac.and.me) • InstagramABA Visualized (@abavisualized) • InstagramABA Speech
12/13/202233 minutes, 50 seconds
Episode Artwork

#101: Autism in Girls and Social Skill Instruction with Carly Millis Jalowiec

I love hearing from autistic individuals in the field who have first-hand experience with the challenges and reality of diagnosis and therapy. Carly Millis Jalowiec is the Education Assistant at Milestones Autism Resources, today she shares with me her journey to her own autism diagnosis as an adult. Carly provides great insight into the difficulty of diagnosing autism in females and why providers and clinicians have an outdated idea of autism.Autism in girls is unfortunately too often missed. Carly explains that in the infancy of autism research was focused primarily on white boys with a narrow view of symptoms and presentations. Providers often only find a diagnosis in those with the same profile while social conditioning and traditional gender expectations create varied presentations for autism. Boys will often present autism symptoms in a very outward way while girls will typically internalize symptoms and characteristics. Carly talks about how arriving at her adult diagnosis leans a lot into her lifelong masking and camouflaging. Masking is a really important topic in the autism field today because so many individuals want and deserve to be honored as themselves. Carly explains how masking can help individuals fit into the world and get through the day but can really hurt themselves internally. She herself says she doesn’t know where she ends and the mask begins. There is an importance to learning to navigate the neurotypical world but not at the expense of losing yourself. This is where clinicians and providers come in. Social Skills instruction often leads therapy in the direction of hiding or changing an autistic individual with unrealistic goals. Carly stresses the importance of setting goals that do not change the individual or try to “remove the autism” because that simply won’t work. Goals and skills should revolve around redefining what success looks like for each individual in a way that honors their true self.Research and understanding of autism have changed in such a rapid way, more than any other field. So it is SO important that we have these important, nuanced conversations to increase awareness. You can find Carly on LinkedIn and check out Milestones online for autism resources and information! #autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:\What it’s really like is getting an adult autism diagnosis.Why is autism often missed in females?The difference in autism presentation for males and females.Why providers and clinicians have an outdated idea of autism.The benefits AND challenges behind masking and camouflaging autism.Teaching social skills to honor the autistic individual.Mentioned In This Episode:Carly Millis Jalowiec - LinkedIn Milestones Autism Resources ABA Speech
12/6/202239 minutes, 5 seconds
Episode Artwork

#100: Let’s Celebrate Episode 100 of the Autism Outreach Podcast (Lisa Chattler)

Wow! I can't believe we are here… episode 100! In honor of this milestone, we are flipping the script with my friend and mentor, Lisa Chattler, interviewing me.Going back to the VERY beginning, I had no idea what I wanted to be, so my mom gave me a career test my senior year and it actually revealed my ideal profession as a speech therapist. I really didn't know a lot about the career so I shadowed a friend of the family who was an SLP and that day I just knew it was perfect for me, so I declared my major and never looked back. Now I've been an SLP for 20 years.Lisa asks some great questions about the learners, mentors, resources, and paths that lead to where I am today: dual certified as a BCBA and SLP, operating an online business, offering courses and webinars, and hosting the Autism Outreach Podcast. And I get to share those important decisions and people who have shaped my experience. Since I was a kid, I've always been in trouble because I was turned sideways in my chair talking away. That is one of the reasons I love this podcast; not only do I get to talk and have great conversations but I get to do so with experts in the field that I really admire. I am happy to have this opportunity and keep spreading the word about autism, SLPs, BCBAs, and ABA through the show and my online courses. Thanks for being a listener, and just know your dedication to the field by listening is so important!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Celebrating 100 episodes of the Autism Outreach PodcastAn interview with host, Rose GriffinThe people, students, and experiences that shaped Rose Griffin’s career journey.Mentioned In This Episode:ABA Speech
11/29/202227 minutes, 53 seconds
Episode Artwork

#099: Early Intervention and ABA with Kristen Colyer

Kristen Colyer is a BCBA and the Director of Children’s Services at The Infinity Center for Behavior Services. She joined me today to discuss Early Intervention and ABA for young children.When you first get that autism diagnosis, beginning Early Intervention and ABA services is the first step for support for many parents and their child. Kristen shares what that looks like at The Infinity Center. Because we are working with young children, most often with limited or no communication, parents are the best reporters. The first step is a parent interview to gain as much insight and knowledge of the child. Next, the child will join for an additional interview with the parent. Finally, the BCBA and the child will engage in play therapy. During this time the BCBA will observe and complete assessments. The Infinity Center most commonly uses the VB-MAPP and depending on the skills and communication level of the child may administer other assessments such as the Essential 8 or social skills assessments. This process from the parent interview to the play observation could span a couple of days. Support does not end with the child. In many cases insurance covers parent training. The Infinity Center offers parent support and twice-monthly parent training. In these trainings, they cover what’s happening in therapy, therapy goals, and how therapy activities can translate to at-home activities. Additionally, because play therapy can be oddly tricky, the center offers shadowing, training, support, and natural environment protocol practice for their staff.Learning and receiving therapy through play is so important and really effective. Kristen shares a few of her favorite and popular toys for therapy sessions. She says children often gravitate towards cause and effect play, favorites for these include the Melissa and Doug Wooden Ball Tower and the classic Jack in the Box. They also play Mr. Potato Head and the Shoebox game, based on BCBA Mary Barbera’s book and courses. The Infinity Center for Behavior Services is based in Maryland, if you’re in the area or would like to learn more you can check them out on social media or visit their website.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What does the assessment look like for children seeking ABA services?What is a robust assessment for younger students with an autism diagnosis?How are parents supported during early intervention?What does ABA look like for younger students?How are staff trained and supported in play and natural environment therapy?Top toys and tools for play therapy. Mentioned In This Episode: Infinity Center ABAInfinity Center for Behavior Services - Home | Facebook
11/22/202229 minutes, 22 seconds
Episode Artwork

Special Episode: Autism Connection

Announcing The 2nd Annual Autism Connection Conference held in collaboration with The Autism Helper. Join us on December 3rd for an exciting, fun, and knowledge-packed conference. The event will run from 8:30 AM to 4:30 PM EST with a break for lunch. Autism Connection features 5 amazing sessions created with SLPs, Special Education teachers, General Education teachers, and BCBAs in mind.Join our LIVE session or replay the recorded event available three days later until December 31st. When you participate you are eligible to receive a general certificate, ASHA CEUs, and ACE Provider credit. This conference features 5 sessions to help support YOU in the classroom and therapy room:Can’t Do or Won’t Do? with Sasha Long, BCBA The Power of Joint Attention with Rose Griffin, SLP-BCBAUsing AAC to Teach AAC with Janna Bedoyan, AAC Specialist, and Morgan Alexandra Van Diepen, BCBAStrategies You Can Try Before Requesting Behavioral Consultation with Matt Cicoria, BCBAThree Ways Teachers Can Support Neurodivergent Learners in Their Classroom with Teva Johnstone, Clinical Social Worker, and TherapistBe sure to get registered for this awesome virtual conference! We can’t wait to see you at Autism Connection on December 3rd! #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Register for the 2nd Annual Autism Connection Conference5 Amazing Sessions for SLPs, BCBAs, and Special and General Education Teachers.How to earn a general certificate, ASHA CEUs, or ACE conference credit.Learn about Positive Behavioral Strategies, AAC, Joint Attention, and more!Mentioned In This Episode: ABA SpeechRegister for The Autism Connection Conference
11/17/20228 minutes, 41 seconds
Episode Artwork

#098: How to Become a BCBA - Rachel Torrance

Rachel Torrance is a BCBA, License intervention specialist, on the board at Milestones Autism Resources, and a Consultant working with parents, school districts, and private agencies to advocate appropriate services and achieve desirable outcomes. Rachel also happens to be my business partner at Supervision Academy, a virtual resource for attaining supervision hours to become a certified BCBA.Becoming a BCBA requires coursework (as a master’s program or post-master’s), Hours, Supervision, Observations, Feedback, Formal Exam, and more. Supervision for a traditional path requires 2000 hours directly supervised by an experienced BCBA or group of BCBAs. At Supervision Academy we know becoming a BCBA is hard work and stressful, and finding a supervisor can be nearly impossible at times. We offer a virtual group of supervisors providing clinical expertise, behavior skills training, guidance, feedback, and more.  Additionally, we strive to provide robust supervision, tailoring your experience to your career goals.When finding a supervisor for this very important piece of your certification we encourage you to cover all of your bases. Rachel suggests asking and considering these questions when interviewing supervisors.Do you have a curriculum and are you set in this curriculum?Are you open to thinking outside the box?How do you determine what you're going to teach and individualize?What does a typical meeting look like?What does supervising feedback look like?What experience does the supervisor have? Do they have a contract?What systems do they have in place for the supervising process?How do they meet HIPAA and FERPA laws for virtual interactions?Does the supervisor meet the rules and laws of the state for practicing ABA?Please note that all information provided in this episode is current as of November 2022. If you’re interested in learning more about Rachel Torrance and her work you can check out her consulting website, as well as visit the Supervision Academy page to find out how we can help you with supervision to become a BCBA!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:How do you become a BCBA?How has becoming a BCBA changed as the field has grown?What are the supervision requirements for becoming a BCBA?What is Supervision Academy?Questions you should be asking prospective supervisors.Mentioned In This Episode: Behavioral and Educational Expert ServicesSupervision Academy
11/15/202227 minutes, 7 seconds
Episode Artwork

#097: Special Education Law with Catherine Michael

Parents, have you ever been in a situation where you're fighting with your child's school to get your child the services they deserve and are entitled to? Catherine Michael has spent more than 20 years working with families on designing success for special needs children. She is a managing partner at the law firm Connell Michael Kerr as well as the founder of Coffee with Catherine, which offers classes and resources for families of children with special needs.A Free Appropriate EducationEvery child in America is entitled to a free appropriate education. This means the support, services, accommodations, and environment that they have been evaluated for and determined to need for their educational success. The Individual Disabilities Education Act, outlines federally what special needs students are required to receive within schools. Many states have even codified and extended these laws into their own state statutes to give more rights to these families.Educational Due ProcessDue Process does not create damage, the goal of this action is to resolve and settle on the necessary support and services for a child as quickly as possible. As soon as the Educational Due Process is filed, a school has 15 days to come to a resolution with the family. If a resolution is not met then an Administrative Hearing will take place. This hearing is an informal relaxed hearing often taking place in a school, where the burden of proof lies on the parents. Catherine discusses the obstacles to the qualifications of the Hearing Officers for these settings and how they can negatively affect the outcome. If you're a professional or parent seeking to learn more about Special Education Law check out the resources at Coffee with Catherine. Additionally, if you're located in Indiana, Michigan, Ohio, Pennsylvania, or Alaska and need legal assistance pertaining to special education, reach out via the Connell Michael Kerr, LLP website.What’s Inside:Who does Special Education Law serve?What is Educational Due Process?What does it mean to receive a free appropriate education?How do parents and schools come to a resolution?What is an Administrative Hearing?What are the qualifications of a Hearing Officer?Mentioned In This Episode: Coffee with CatherineConnell Michael Kerr, LLP 
11/8/202235 minutes, 58 seconds
Episode Artwork

#096: Supporting SLPs Working in an ABA Setting with Julianne Trudeau

As an SLP-BCBA, collaboration is a really important part of my work. Julianne Trudeau is an SLP and Director of Speech Services at Bierman Autism Center. This center grew from a small in-home provider to a clinic-based therapy center with 17 locations across the country. Bierman operates a Collaborative Service Model in which BCBAs, SLPs, and OTs work together to best serve the child.I've shared many stories in the past about the difficulty I've both seen and experienced with the collaboration between SLPs and BCBAs. Julianne uses an analogy, I love. BCBAs and SLPs are like a married couple, they may not always see eye to eye but they have the same goal at heart. This goal is in the best interest of the child. In collaborating together, BCBAs and SLPs can take a bit from each other to become better, more informed professionals and make the child the most successful as possible at the same time.Bierman Autism Center increases the success of their collaborative service model by embedding opportunities into the schedule. Providers have embedded meetings for communication and collaboration for their cases. They also schedule weekly clinical staff meetings, monthly center staff meetings, and quarterly meetings for centers across the region. Bierman also embeds collaborative training opportunities for staff and parents.Intake a Bierman begins with a family tour led by the center director. During this time services, goals, and collaborative ideas are discussed with the family. This visit will be followed up with an initial assessment and the parents will be provided the opportunity to have their child's ABA supplemented with service from other center providers such as SLPs and OTs. When a family chooses to participate in a collaborative service, each department will assess the child and collaborate and touch base on overlapping areas and goals. You can find out more about Bierman Autism Centers at their website or on social media.What’s Inside:What is a Collaborative Service Model?What is Collaborative Assessment?How SLPs, BCBAs, and OTs can effectively collaborate.Using Collaborative Assessment to get a true snapshot of the child.Planning appropriately for intervention.Mentioned In This Episode:Bierman Autism Centers
11/1/202229 minutes, 27 seconds
Episode Artwork

#095: A Family's Autism Journey- A Chat with Autumn Ziemba

Autumn Ziemba was working as a news anchor for Fox 8 News when her son received his autism diagnosis. Through her family journey and support in the autism community, Autumn has shifted careers to become the Communications and Content Manager for Milestones Autism Resources. As a mother of two, Autumn knew what to expect for typical development in her young children. When her youngest started showing signs of regression, loss of speech, disinterest in typical play, and others around her began to notice too, it was time for an evaluation. With the support of her family’s pediatrician, her son was able to receive a diagnosis at age 2 and a half. This was in 2017 and the times were different when it came to support, resources, and services. Her son started with play-based ABA and speech therapy for one hour a week, not nearly enough. To add to their hardship, just three months post-diagnosis her son was diagnosed with Leukemia. Their focus had to shift from early intervention to cancer treatment. After the early days and weeks of treatment, their family was able to bring back ABA therapy and other services. Now at 7 years old, Autumn's son is a Leukemia-Survivor and attending school in a special needs classroom with great support from their school district. As a parent who has been through so much with her son and her family, Autumn’s biggest advice to professionals, providers, teachers, and anyone working with autism families is to have empathy. For her empathy, compassion, and understanding goes a long way. I’ve seen firsthand professionals and other parties be less than supportive of families with questions, and agendas. But Autumn reminds us that parents are coming in with only their children’s best interest at heart, and it's important to understand that.For families just beginning their autism journey whether pre or post-diagnosis: Do not fear the diagnosis. Autumn shares that while a concrete diagnosis can feel scary, it can actually open up doors to resources, services, and support that you wouldn't otherwise have. Take each day as it comes, and remember not every approach will work for every child. Meet your child in the middle and allow them to be a part of their own team!If you’d like to find out more about Autumn Ziemba you can find her family's autism story online, as well as her contact information on the Milestones website. What’s Inside:Autumn Ziemba and her family’s autism journey.Seeing the early signs of autism.Navigating resources and services post-diagnosis.Tips for professionals communicating with parents.Advice for autism families.Mentioned In This Episode: Milestones.org
10/25/202231 minutes, 44 seconds
Episode Artwork

#094: 10 Ideas To Increase Student Engagement

I haven’t done a solo show in a while and I am excited today to share my 10 strategies to increase student engagement. I had a client, let’s call him Adam for today, and when I started working with him, he did not communicate or even engage at all. I would bring different toys and objects to try to get his attention through play-based learning but we would just take a toy and leave. About after 4 sessions with him, his parents started asking me when am I going to use a more structure approach and really work on his communication skills. Truthfully, I felt defeated and anxious.But at 20 plus years into my career already, I have done so much research about joint attention and how valuable this is to ABA and Speech Therapy. On our 5th session, I brought Mini Objects in a bag and although Adam’s engagement was still fleeting then, he picked up a toy form the bag and it was a shoe. Adam exclaims, “Shoe!” and we were all so excited because that was his first word during his sessions! It was in this moment that I realized that Adam has started his journey with communication and when we realize that these small steps every session matter, it opens up a path for spontaneous communication. So today, I share and break down my top 10 tips I applied to help increase Adam’s engagement in therapy. Start with something fun that your student enjoys.Work on shared activities. Use books for your students. Use a song.Analyze when your student needs a break.Target the IEP goals.Take the data and be specific. Get up and moving.What does your student love and enjoy and how can you embed that into your sessions?Where do you see the student? What environment do you work in?Every student is different so with these strategies, you really need to be creative and discern what works for your student at the moment. What works for one student may or may not work for another. If you have a student in mind that you want to help start communicating, these strategies will really be beneficial to improving your relationships with your students and increasing their learner engagement. For more tips and information on helping students with communicating, check out our ASHA approved 5-hour course, Start Communicating Today.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:A case study about a student who had zero engagement. Why play-based learning and joint attention is important. My 10 strategies to increase learner engagement. How to apply these 10 strategies to your therapy sessions. Mentioned in this Episode: ABA SpeechStart Communicating Today Course
10/18/202230 minutes, 12 seconds
Episode Artwork

#093: ABA for SLPs with Dr. Joanne Gerenser

I love this power statement: “If you don’t believe in ABA, it’s like you don’t believe in breathing.” It’s a really impactful tidbit from my chat with Dr. Joanne Gerenser, SLP and Executive Director of the Eden II Programs. Dr. Gereneser and I discuss the importance of ABA in the field, as well as what that means for collaborating with other professionals; having SLPs and BCBAs work together with ABA to serve students with autism, especially those with challenging behavior.There are some professionals and parents in the field that just really don’t understand what ABA is. There can be a lot of mean-spirited, negative, information online about ABA depending on where you’re looking. When you really look at it and understand the professionals working in the ABA field and the help it can provide to the autism community with serious learning and behavior challenges, you will see just how important it is. When it comes to collaboration, you can’t paint every BCBA with the same brush just the same as SLPs. The worst therapists are not representative of the entire field and you cannot walk into an interaction with telling the other professional what to do; It erodes the professional relationship.Dr. Gerenser’s techniques for communicating with hesitant professionals:Build a professional relationship.See the person beyond the technique.Be humble, you don’t know all the answers.You can find out more about Eden II and Dr. Joanne Gerenser, visit Eden II Programs online.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Using ABA in Speech TherapyHow to collaborate with hesitant professionalsServing students with problem behaviors as an SLPMentioned In This Episode: Home - Eden II Programs (eden2.org)ABA Speech: HomeRegister for the free SLP in an ABA Setting Mentorship webinar
10/11/202231 minutes, 10 seconds
Episode Artwork

#092: Culturally Responsive Intervention For Autistic Learners with Maria Davis-Pierre

As therapists we know that every client is different when it comes to goals, abilities, and needs but how often are we checking up on our cultural awareness for each individual? Maria Davis-Pierre is a mental health counselor and the founder of Autism in Black. As a mother with two autistic children and autism herself, Maria understands the stigma associated with the diagnosis and is on a mission to educate on inclusive, culturally responsive therapy for black families and other underrepresented cultures. “Is there anything culturally we should know about you?” A question Maria highlights as one of the best questionnaire form inclusions she has seen when it comes to starting therapy. As a professional and therapist working with unique individuals from all cultures and backgrounds, there are no details too small to incorporate into therapy that fit your client's culture. For example, bring culturally relevant props for a therapy lesson or check your understanding of cultural concepts that could be a typical household routine for one culture but seen as a learning deficit in another. Whether props, books, flashcards, etc. be cognisant of your materials and the reflection of your client within them. It is important for black children to see themselves reflected in their learning materials to not only understand but also stay engaged. It is okay if you’re not an expert on every culture and every family. Ask questions, be open, and create a dialog so that you can continue to learn and support your clients in a culturally responsive way. What to keep in mind when getting started with culture-responsive therapy:It's okay to be uncomfortable, check your bias. Growth comes from uncomfortability.Use representative tools and materials. Be curious and ask questions. Life-long learning process.Be open, honest, and admit when you make mistakes.As therapists and professionals are number one, the goal is to always help the children and culturally responsive therapy is a really important but often forgotten piece of that. Maria shares some great tips and insights for professionals to consider. You can find out more about her work on the Autism in Black website. What’s Inside:How can we as professionals be more culturally responsive?Tips and strategies for being culturally responsive and inclusive in your therapy sessions?How to incorporate your clients' unique cultural needs?Check your understanding: Learning Deficit vs. Cultural PreferenceMentioned In This Episode: Autism in Black ABA Speech: HomeRegister for the free SLP in an ABA Setting Mentorship webinar
10/4/202231 minutes, 23 seconds
Episode Artwork

#091: Naturalistic Developmental Behavioral Interventions with Dr. Ariana Boutain

Dr. Ariana Boutain is the Vice President of Clinical Services at KGH Autism Services. At their facility, they are passionate about child-initiated and play-based therapy with NDBI.Naturalistic Developmental Behavioral Intervention is an empirically supported approach to treating young children with autism that involves learning through play. NDBI represents a merge of ABA and developmental science.The general framework for NDBI that Dr. Ariana and her colleagues use is the principles of ABA as well as developmentally based assessments and intervention strategies for guiding goal development and individualization. Teaching strategies with NDBI involve child-initiated, child-led play. This involves environmental setup, communication temptation, and shared control with turn-taking. Interdisciplinary collaboration is a hot topic in the field of autism but it is a high priority at KGH. As they add SLPs, OTs, and other providers to their team they match therapy approaches, encourage play-based therapy for all disciplines and provide thorough training on NDBI.You can find out more about the work and treatment model at KGH on their website!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What is NDBI?Applied Behavior Analysis and Developmental Based Intervention.Why are child-centered therapy and play-based learning important?A framework for interdisciplinary collaboration.Mentioned In This Episode: Our Services | KGH Autism Services: ASD Treatment Clinic, Chicago & MadisonAdvanced Language Learner - Sign Up Today - ABA SpeechRegister for the Pyramid Educational Consultant’s Third Annual FUNctional Communication Conference on October 17th & 18thABA Speech: Home
9/27/202231 minutes, 29 seconds
Episode Artwork

#090: The Autism Puzzle Piece- A Talk With Thomas McKean

Whether you’re a parent, professional, or an autistic individual, you have most likely seen the Autism Puzzle Piece. Like myself, you might even have a sticker or magnet on display as a symbol of your support for the community. But what is the real symbolism behind it? In this episode, I have the honor to talk with Thomas McKean, an autistic adult who had an integral part in the development of this icon. Prior to Thomas’s collaboration in the creation of today’s autism puzzle piece, the original icon developed in 1963 was a puzzle piece with a child crying. This symbol represented the hopelessness, sadness, and confusion for children with autism at the time. In the 1960s, there was little to no research, ethical treatment, or support for autism families. When Thomas and his colleagues developed the new symbol in 1999 they knew the view and information about autism had changed a lot. There was much more hope and a positive shift had taken place in the community. They wanted to embody that. The autism symbol as we know it today is represented by a puzzle piece reflecting the information we are still missing and learning as we add new “pieces”, it features a multi-colored design to represent diversity in the community. "If you've met one person with autism, you've met one person with autism." - Dr. Stephen ShoreThis representation of diversity is so crucial to Thoma’s advice when it comes to division in the field. He says, the difference is not bad, in fact, it's necessary. Because each individual with autism is so different it's important for professionals to see things differently and really work toward an individual approach. No professional is going to have all the answers for every autistic person, and when we understand that, we can peacefully collaborate. Thomas says one of his most asked questions is how to help parents who are just venturing into their autism journey with their child. For that, he has 4 steps.Read and LearnFind SupportAttend conferences, presentations, and network in the community.Start OT and receive an evaluation for sensory processing.From there you will learn the pieces of how to support, treat, and help your child.This was such an enlightening talk on the true vision and meaning of such an important icon in our community. I hope you found it just as interesting as I did! #autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:The Symbolism behind the Autism Puzzle Piece.Advice for professionals on resolving division in the autism community.4 steps for parents entering the autism journey with their child.Mentioned In This Episode: Thomas A. McKeanThomas A. McKean | FacebookAdvanced Language Learner - Sign Up Today - ABA SpeechRegister for the Pyramid Educational Consultant’s Third Annual FUNctional Communication Conference on October 17th & 18thABA Speech: Home
9/20/202226 minutes, 44 seconds
Episode Artwork

#089: How To Help Your Autistic Learners Go Beyond Basic Communication

“Rose speaks through the lens of the SLP and BCBA which is incredibly helpful in bridging the communication between the two fields. Rose keeps students' individual needs at the forefront of decisions on therapy targets and she incorporates autistic voices and has worked hard to keep therapy and training relevant to autistic learners. I appreciated her practical therapy ideas and sharing of materials to get started.” Jenny Blackman, SLPIntroducing ABA Speech’s newest course, Advanced Language Learner. A brand new 5-hour ASHA and ACE-approved course. Are your autistic learners struggling to break beyond their basic communication skills? Plateauing? This course is packed full of helpful, transformative content to bring your learners and your therapy to the next level.What can you expect to learn?-Effective assessments-Collaboration tips and techniques-Developing expressive and receptive communication skills-Strengthening social skills AND respecting individuality-IEP Meeting Tips-Effective group intervention-Guest Lecturer: Oliver Wendt, Matrix Training-Monthly group mentoring and support with access to the online community-Materials: Adapted books, no prep group activities, language book, leisure activity visuals, and so much more.Do not miss out on this one-time-only FOUNDERS pricing: $197 available for 1 week only!#autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:How to go from basic communication skills to skyrocketing speech and language growthWhat you can expect from ABA Speech’s newest course: Advanced Language LearnerInformation and materials for assessments, collaboration, IEP goals, group intervention, and more.Founders Price for a brand new ASHA and ACE-approved course.Mentioned In This Episode: Advanced Language Learner - Sign Up Today - ABA SpeechRegister for the Pyramid Educational Consultant’s Third Annual FUNctional Communication Conference on October 17th & 18thABA Speech: Home
9/13/202220 minutes, 22 seconds
Episode Artwork

#088: Planning Group Therapy For Autistic Students

“Rose, I’m not sure how to plan a session. I have 5 autistic students that I need to see for group therapy to work on social language instruction and I am not sure what activities to plan to help them remain engaged and work on their individual and social language goals.”I received this question in an email from one of my listeners! So today’s episode I am sharing my customizable framework for planning group therapy, along with some great resources, activity ideas, and freebies!Group Therapy FrameworkTools: SmartBoard or iPad for sharing visuals with groupQuestion of the DayTry a “Would You Rather” or other choice-based question.Have students come up to tally their choice, and encourage interaction with the next peerCheck out my Let’s Talk and Would You Rather resources for the SmartBoardLiteracy-Based ActivityRead an adapted book with real-life pictures, real-life scenarios (book should have one sentence, one picture - I have linked some I created but feel free to DIY your own!)Pull up book on large screen, smart board, or iPadRead TOGETHER, differentiate reading by having students read known sight wordsExtension Based ActivityExpand and dig deeper into the functional vocabulary related to the adapted bookTry a simple writing activity Another great idea is categorizing and labeling based on the bookLeisure Based ActivityA fun activity that our kids love and can be generalized at homeRelevant to use over the lifespanIdeas: Modified Uno, Modified Connect Four, The Grocery Store Game, YogaI have linked all of the resources and freebies I shared today that can be used in this customizable framework for planning group therapy sessions for autistic learners, be sure to check them out!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:A framework for planning group therapy instruction for autistic learners.Free activities for group therapy.What shared goals can you work on within group therapy?How can group therapy benefit all learners?How to facilitate peer-to-peer interaction in group therapy.Encouraging participation and social engagement in a group.Mentioned In This Episode: Fall Freebie Would You Rather by ABA SPEECHFarm Visit Adapted Book by ABA SPEECHGrocery Store PPTRegister for the Pyramid Educational Consultant’s Third Annual FUNctional Communication Conference on October 17th & 18thABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA Speech​​Help Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA Speech
9/6/202228 minutes, 48 seconds
Episode Artwork

#087: Speech Sound Production and Autistic Learners - A Talk With Tamara Kasper

What is it that develops speech production in our learners? Today, Tamara Kasper, BCBA and SLP, is sharing some really great and specific information on how speech production and reinforcement differs between typical developing children versus children with autism.Speech Sound ProductionIn typically developing children, speech sounds are reinforced differentially and automatically when making sounds that sound like words. For example, they get a cookie when they make a sound that sounds like cookie or they get happy, hugging excitement when they say something that sounds like mama or dada. Naturally, typical children are encouraged by the sounds and interactions in their environment and want to match the sounds made by the people they value in their world. This is where self-correction and refinement comes in because they will notice and hear how their sounds may sound different from the adults around them. In non-typically developing children, specifically those with autism, they are more sensitive to social stimuli and are less likely to be affected by the attention of their parents or guardians in regards to their sounds. So the traditional, automatic reinforcement to make and refine sounds is not occurring. Additionally, these learners will not likely notice how their sounds sound different from those around them, leading to no self-correction as sound production continues. Therapy for Speech Sound ProductionTamra shares her assessment and criteria for determining readiness for working on speech production. She collects metrics from the VB-MAPP, indicating responses, manding rate and variety, instruction cooperation development, and echoic repertoire. The scores and data from these metrics will relay whether a Natural Environment or Structure Teaching therapy is appropriate for these students. Within these systems, Tamra discusses the programs she uses. She shares today a little bit of her rubric on how she assigns these programs based on the needs of the child and assessment criteria. If you’d like to learn more about Tamra, you can find out more about her work and some video tips at Northern Speech Services. Additionally, if you’d like access to her therapy rubric discussed today and other resources, you can reach her via email.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Acquisition of speech production in typical vs non-typical children.Do typically developing children shape sounds to match those in their environment?How do we know when an autistic learner is ready for speech sound production in therapy?Assessment and Criteria for determining therapy training for sound production.Training programs for natural environment and structured teaching therapy.Mentioned In This Episode:tkasper@centerautism.orgNorthern Speech Services ABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA Speech​​Help Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA SpeechSeptember 13th FREE Webinar 8-9 pm EST registration linkSeptember 14th Free Webinar 8-9 pm EST registration link
8/30/202238 minutes, 31 seconds
Episode Artwork

#086: IEP Development With Stephanie DeLussey

Nothing can cause more stress than an IEP meeting looming in the future. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Stephanie DeLussey, IEP coach and veteran special education teacher, joined me on the podcast today to share some tips and suggestions for making IEPs not only painless but more productive. Goal SettingSMART goals are a big buzzword in the education community, but what does it mean? Stephanie breaks down the acronym;Specific -Is the goal individualized and a direct skill, no generalizations?Measurable - Can the goal be tracked with data?Attainable - Is this goal realistic for the student?Relevant - Is this goal relevant to the student's needs, capabilities, and grade level?Timebound - Is the goal given a realistic timetable to be met by the student?Objectives and benchmarks are often used interchangeably when discussing goals, but they are not the same. Objectives are larger skills broken down into smaller skills and goals. A Benchmark looks more like the Annual IEP Goal but is broken into steps to achieve it. As Stephanie called it, ‘same staircase, different way to climb it’.Every state's guidance when it comes to skills can be very different, some have State Standards, some have Common Core, some have Essential Elements. Depending on even your district or your individual school, whether you include these in your IEP goals or not. Stephanie explains how this relates to the IDEA Federal Law, state laws, and local recommendations.Stephanie’s Top Two Tips for IEP Preparation: 1. Send Draft IEP - Stephanie recommends always sending home a draft IEP including the present levels of baseline data and the proposed goals. This levels the playing field for the caregiver, and provides much more collaboration between guardian and education team.2. Consult the General Ed Teacher -  Recognizing that there can be animosity between special education and general education teachers, Stephanie encourages collaboration and to work together on IEP accommodations to create individualized and classroom specific modifications.You can find out more about Stephanie via Mrs. D’s Corner for educational resources and The Intentional IEP for IEP support.What’s Inside:Tips for IEP Development.What is a SMART goal?The difference between objectives and benchmarks.How are state “standards” used in IEP goals?Does state testing affect IEP goals?Stephanie’s top two suggestions for IEP meeting preparation.Mentioned In This Episode: The Intentional IEPMrs. D's CornerABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA Speech​​Help Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA SpeechSeptember 13th FREE Webinar 8-9 pm eastern registration linkSeptember 14th FREE Webinar 8-9 pm eastern registration link
8/23/202229 minutes, 32 seconds
Episode Artwork

#085: What is an Independent Educational Evaluation (IEE)?

When it comes to parents advocating for their child’s education there can be so much to navigate, many times parents don’t even know their legal rights. Amanda Selogie and Vicki Brett are attorneys and founders of The Inclusive Education Project, a non-profit organization that educates families on special education rights. If you have a child receiving in school therapy or you're a school based provider, you may have heard the term IEE. But what is it? An IEE is an Individual Education Evaluation performed by a qualified person not employed by the school district. This evaluation is a legal right detailed in 34 CFR § 300. 502.The purpose of IEE is to service the child. Not the parent. Not any providers. Not the school district. This is why these can be such a great tool. Parents might seek these out if a child’s education plan is missing critical assessments or if there is a disagreement in the analysis of any assessments. The idea is to get a full scope and understanding of a child’s abilities and needs to best inform their education and any interventions or services. When requesting an IEE it's important to look at what’s the concern with the current assessments, and what is the goal an IEE can help achieve?If you’re a school based provider, do not be offended about the request for an IEE. The need for an IEE does not mean a therapist, or provider is not doing their job. There are certain limits that can prevent authentic results, such as access to limited assessments, testing environments, and sometimes a damaged rapport. The benefit of an IEE being conducted by a non-school district employed provider means that often the evaluator has different, more complex qualifications and expertise. Meaning, the evaluator can assess and analyze across disciplines. An IEE evaluator can offer fresh perspective, new environment, and more variety in assessment options. When we’re determining an education plan for a child, more information is ALWAYS better. The more everyone knows about a child's needs and abilities, the more detailed and purposeful goals can be made. Amanda and Vicki are doing great work spreading awareness of parents rights for their children’s education. You can reach them at their website, social media, or via email.#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:What is an IEE?How can therapists use and embed information from an IEE?How to utilize an IEE within an IEP?What legal rights do families have in their child's education?What are the benefits of an IEE?What reasons might a child need an IEE?Mentioned In This Episode: Inclusive Education Project @inclusiveeducationproject - InstagramInclusive Education Project - Home | Facebookadmin@iepcalifornia.org ABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA Speech​​Help Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA Speech
8/16/202237 minutes, 37 seconds
Episode Artwork

#084: Naturalistic Communication Training with Dr. Cindy Gevarter

There is so much opportunity for communication in our students' natural environments. But how can we use this intentionally and build our therapy plan around it? Dr. Cindy Gevarter, BCBA-D and assistant professor in the Department of Speech and Hearing Sciences at the University of New Mexico, joins me to discuss real world applications for naturalistic communication training in your therapy sessions.Assessments:When beginning therapy sessions for students, assessments are important for understanding students skills, goals, and needs. Dr. Gevarter listed several of her preferred assessments for naturalistic communication training that we have talked about on the show many times!Communication MatrixVB-MAPPEarly Start Denver ModelPlanning:Naturalistic communication is not random play, when preparing for a session keep in mind opportunities, routines, and priorities that are typical for your student. But you can’t just wing it. Dr. Gevarter recommends planning with an Activity Matrix: skills and goals associated with activities and embedded strategies. Follow through with developmental extension, parent coaching, and an environment set up for natural communication. A lot of the strategies and planning we discuss apply directly to 1 to 1 sessions, but Dr. Gevarter elaborates on how to plan for dyads and group settings by intentional peer to peer interaction or typical routines such as circle time or an art activity.Data:In a natural environment, we can’t pause a student while we record data. Dr. Gevarter suggests simplifying your data for quick observations. You may try using a rating scale or other shorthands that you can understand when noting responses, and goal planning. Remember that this is informal data collection used to inform your sessions, don’t overcomplicate it!Why Natural Environment?I often find parents in in-home sessions surprised that our therapy isn't taking place at a table with structured activities. While there is a time and a place for the table, there is a major benefit to utilizing a student's natural environment. When participating in natural play or natural environment activities, students are seeing and receiving natural reinforcement from their communication. They can actually see and experience the benefit of communication.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:How can we adapt the natural environment of our sessions for communication?How to use an embedded approach for natural communication.Using naturalistic training in 1:1, dyads, and group sessions.Real world opportunities for your next therapy session.How to simplify data collection for observation in a natural setting.What are preferred assessments for naturalistic communication training?Mentioned In This Episode: Cindy Gevarter, Ph.D., BCBA-D Collaborative Autism GrantProject SCENESABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA Speech​​Help Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA Speech
8/9/202231 minutes, 38 seconds
Episode Artwork

#083: SLP/BCBA Collaboration with Dr. Teresa Cardon and Dr. Lina Slim

I always joke that it is my mission to meet all the unicorns out there, the dually certified SLP and BCBAs, as there are less than 500 in the world. Today I am talking with Dr. Teresa Cardon and Dr. Lina Slim both SLPs and BCBA-Ds. We are focusing on a subject that it a hot topic but near and dear to my heart, collaboration. Too often I see and hear problems between SLPs and BCBAs in therapy, IEP meetings, etc. But we need to be communicating and collaborating for our clients! Dr. Cardon and Dr. Slim share their perspectives on what barriers exist that are making these relationships so difficult. First and foremost is communication, frequently there is not respectful, humble, and open communication between these two providers. Additionally, specialty specific jargon is thrown around that can confuse and frustrate other professionals who arent “in the know”. Interpersonal skills, self-reflection, and bias awareness are really key to keeping communication productive. Try going into every conversation with your professional team of other specialties with the understanding that no one is wrong, we just see things differently. We also discuss logistical differences such as philosophy and theory. Your philosophy as a therapist can really impact your practice and how you view other providers. Whether you approach with a behavioral, developmental, or social theory will really guide your thinking and reception of collaboration with differing points of view. Dr. Lina Slim shares with us the ideas of the Four Domains of Authentic Interprofessional Culturally Aware and Responsive Collaborative Practice. Cultural Sensitivity and ResponsivenessCultural CompetenceCultural HumilityCultural ReciprocityWe are in agreement that collaboration has to be more common practice in our fields. Working together will benefit the health and educational outcome of the clients we serve. It is necessary, because it is simply not possible for one person to have all the answers. We have got to start teaching this practice before our new therapists enter schools and facilities! Dr. Slim and Dr. Cardon both share how they are advocating and encouraging this in the field through there work in this great episode!What’s Inside:Why is collaboration important for SLP and BCBAs?Common barriers in SLP/BCBA collaboration?The Four Domains of Authentic Interprofessional Culturally Aware and Responsive Collaborative Practice.Can your theory of practice affect your ability to collaborate?Why medical jargon is negatively affecting collaboration?The importance of respect and humbleness in collaboration.Mentioned In This Episode: TCardon@thechicagoschool.eduLinaslimtop@gmail.com ABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA SpeechHelp Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA Speech
8/2/202234 minutes, 56 seconds
Episode Artwork

#082: Inclusive Preschool Programming with Dr. Katie Walton of Ohio State University

Starting preschool for both typically and non typically developing students is a big step, and there are a lot of important factors to consider. Dr. Katie Walton of Ohio State University oversees the Nisonger Center, an Inclusive Preschool Program. This center works with students with and without disabilities from birth to age 5.What is Inclusive Preschool Programming?Inclusive in short means that it includes all students, regardless of learning needs. What this looks like can vary from practice to practice. Some schools might just incorporate all learning types and work to meet all needs and others might focus on special needs services while incorporating typically developing children. Early intervention practices, while important for specific needs, are actually best practice teaching that can benefit any and all students, especially in a preschool setting. Assessments, Planning and Goal SettingPlanning and goal setting are essential for any classroom and any student. At the Nisonger Center they use a curriculum based assessment, APES, for daily planning for all students. Therapists and providers within the school will do individual assessments for needs and goals setting within IEP teams for students who require additional support. Additionally, important for any preschool program is a robust social and emotional skill plan. The team at Nisonger works hard to set functional goals, on what social and emotional skills look like in action, versus checking a box on a goal list. Dr. Walton also shares about the really great collaborative loop from their preschool team to public schools, for IEP goals and transition. This is such a huge benefit for school based providers and families for a full understanding of a child’s needs and abilities. Are you a parent considering preschool programs for your child?It can be confusing, overwhelming, and hard to know what's right when looking for a program for your preschool aged child. Dr. Walton provides some questions for parents to consider and ask their prospective programs.What does the day look like? Curriculum, schedule, structure.How are daily schedules and activities adapted for different learning needs?What are the discipline policies? How are behavioral problems handled? Is there an emphasis on positive reinforcement and strategies?Bring your child: How do they interact with your child? How do they respond to your child's normal behaviors? How does your child respond to the environment?An Inclusive Preschool Program has so much to offer both children with and without disabilities. Whether you’re a professional working in a preschool or a parent ready to place your child in the right school, consider the ideas we’ve discussed in today’s episode to ensure the best practices are being used for your child and their unique needs!#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:What does Inclusive Preschool Programming actually mean?What should parents look for in a preschool program?How inclusive programming can accommodate a wide variety of learning needs.How preschools work with public schools on planning and goal setting for students.What assessments might be used in an inclusive preschool setting?Setting functional goals: What do interactions and skills actually look like in practice?How early intervention practices can benefit students both with and without disabilities.Mentioned In This Episode: Nisonger Center Early Learning ProgramStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA Speech​​Help Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN
7/26/202230 minutes, 37 seconds
Episode Artwork

#081: Addressing Social Skills with Dr. Ali Arena

The social setting of our world is ever-changing and developing, for autistic individuals it can be hard to understand and keep up with the skills to navigate it! Dr. Ali Arena is an SLP, BCBA who specializes in social skills. While Dr. Arena works primarily with autistic adults, she shares some great tips that can be applied across the lifespan. As a provider, working on Social Skills requires a strong and trusting relationship with your client. Dr. Arena shares about how she has learned about her clients interests and hobbies and allowed them to be the expert in the conversation. She also reminds therapists to create connections and rapport before diving into their interests because these connections become genuine. Another tool Dr. Arena uses in her therapy are dyads, she finds peer group practice between neurodivergent individuals can be really impactful in understanding social cues and norms.Masking is something autistic individuals in the community are really speaking out against. Dr. Arena agrees that being true to yourself and not changing are important. I reference what a previous guest had called camouflaging, as a tool to follow societal rules. Sometimes as an adult, you just need to know how to talk to your boss or your professor in college. Following social rules can be necessary for autistic adults and that's where Dr. Arena comes in. Her clients come to her to repair social communication, either for work, relationships, or other problems they might be having. It’s not masking but rather building, learning, and refining new skills.From focusing on REALISTIC social situations for all ages to helping autistic adults with romantic relationships, Dr. Arena has some great tips for therapists, parents, and any professional working with autistic individuals on social skills. You can find out more about her at her website or on Instagram.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Navigating constantly changing social skills.How to adjust mindset after social rejection for autistic individuals.Coaching relationships for autistic adults.Masking vs Camouflage in a nuanced society.How to encourage realistic communication and connections.Mentioned In This Episode: Dr.Ali - Connection Creator (@connectingwithali) on Instagram Ali Arena Communications: HomeABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA SpeechHelp Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA Speech Use coupon code SUNNYSALE75 and save $75 off Start Communicating Today and $75 off Help Me Find My Voice. Offer ends July 31st. 
7/19/202236 minutes
Episode Artwork

#080: Dynamic Assessment - A Talk With Shellie Bader

Have you ever felt like an assessment didn’t truly tell the story of your child? Shellie Bader is an SLP with a really incredible and valuable career. Today she is sharing all about Dynamic Assessment and how we as Speech Therapists can use this to enrich and drive speech therapy.Oftentimes, formal and informal assessments are not comprehensive enough to determine the “story of the child”. Dynamic Assessment is a qualitative assessment we are able to use, to get the bigger picture. It is an alternative or supplemental assessment, with a method that provides the ability to understand what a student can learn. This tool can help determine whether a child has a learning difference or a learning disorder, and how a child learns and is specifically helpful with students who use English as a second language or have other special circumstances. Where do you start with intervention when it seems like everything should be a goal? Along with Dynamic Assessment comes a Mediated Learning Experience. In which the therapist picks a skill that is relevant or important to the child. This learning potential observation occurs over one session, so the therapist can determine the abilities of the child within the learning process.When completing a Mediated Learning Experience, the information collected can drive you directly to the creation of IEP goals. Through working on a skill, the therapist will actually be able to see the prompts that are successful, the supports needed, the targets a student struggles with, and how the skill should be scaffolded. A Dynamic Assessment and a Mediated Learning Experience is another tool for your SLP tool belt to help determine how a student learns specific skills while always working on meaningful, functional skills for the student and their independence. If you’re interested in finding out more or talking with Shellie Bader, you can reach her via LinkedIn or email!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:How can we have tools that will drive the road map for intervention?How can we help students increase their functional communication skills, independence, and joy?What is Dynamic Assessment?How can SLPs use Dynamic Assessment in the therapeutic and evaluation process?What is the distinction between a learning difference versus a learning disorder?What is a mediated learning experience?Mentioned In This Episode: Shellie Bader, M.A., CCC-SLP - LinkedInShellieSLP@gmail.com ABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA Speech​​Help Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA Speech To receive 75$ OFF BOTH of these courses in the month of JULY, use code SUNNYSALE75. 
7/12/202229 minutes, 26 seconds
Episode Artwork

#079: ABA SPEECH Courses and Sale

Happy Summer!! I am excited to announce that we are hosting a SALE for the month of July on our courses, Start Communicating Today and Help Me Find My Voice.These are CEU courses with ASHA and ACE approval for SLPs and BCBAs. Summer is the perfect time to take advantage of your free time and get the tools to help your autistic learners from toddlers, preschool, and school age.Start Communicating Today is a 5 hour course for toddler and preschool aged learners. Get confident in your abilities to help your learner use their voice. In this course you will find support and research backed tools for assessments, IEP goal setting, structuring therapy and so much more.Help Me Find My Voice is a 5 hour course for school age learners. Working with this age can be overwhelming and intimidating. In this course you will find the tools for success all in one place, with support for assessments, IEP goal setting and meeting structure, engaging therapy plans,  and even AAC support.The purchase of both of these courses include 3 month access to the 5 hour course, research backed tools, and printables. As well as ASHA reporting and CEUs.To receive 75$ OFF BOTH of these courses in the month of JULY, use code SUNNYSALE75.I cannot wait to see you in the courses!What’s Inside:What is Start Communicating Today?What is Help Me Find My Voice?ASHA, ACE approved CEU courses AVAILABLE NOW.JULY 2022 Sale on ASHA approved courses on ABA Speech.Find Research backed tools and resources for therapy with toddler through school age learners.Mentioned In This Episode: SALE CODE: SUNNYSALE75Start Communicating Today – Waitlist – ABA Speech Help Me Find My Voice – EVERGREEN – ABA SpeechABA Speech: Home
7/5/202211 minutes, 37 seconds
Episode Artwork

#078: 5 Strategies for Toddlers and Preschool Aged Students

Is your learner difficult to engage? Are you not sure where to start? Is your learner not communicating? Knowing where to start can be stressful!!! I am here to help with my top 5 strategies to get your autistic learner communicating today!Strategy 1: Create a Fun AtmospherePresent a toy the child will enjoy. Play with the toy and use simple language.(play dough, cars, musical toys, mini objects, etc.)Strategy 2: ObserveWhat does your learner like to do? How is your learner currently communicating?(Make notes about their likes, and dislikes. Is your learner vocalizing, using pictures, pointing, pulling to an item, etc.?)Strategy 3: Engage in Shared ActivitiesConnection before communication(Reading a book, singing a song, playing with toys)Strategy 4: Create a Positive AtmospherePositive Vibes Only: Use simple language, do not bombard your learner with questions.(“Wow, I see a truck!” Vs. “What is that? What color is that”)Strategy 5: Remain FlexibleWhat you planned may look different than how it actually happens. Adapt the skill to following the learner's lead.Now you can rest easy because that starting point is not out of reach! If you want to learn more including all about assessments, goal setting, therapy structure, tools and resources, join my toddler and preschool course: Start Communicating Today!#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:A listen at Rose Griffin, of ABA Speech, most listened to the webinar.Early Intervention strategies for toddler and preschool-aged students.Find a starting point for formal or at-home therapy sessions.Help YOUR learners to Start Communicating Today!Tools and tips for SLPS, Parents, and Special Education Professionals.Mentioned In This Episode: ABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today
6/28/202243 minutes, 47 seconds
Episode Artwork

#077: Supporting Speech Therapy Carryover In The Summer

I first found Calonda Henry on TikTok, where she shares tons of great tips and information for parents and professionals. Calonda is a Florida based SLP where she owns a certified Woman and Minority owned practice, Broad Horizons Speech Therapy. With summer here, many learners are not receiving their school based speech and language services and parents may want to know how to help. As parents, we want to do the very best for our child and it can feel overwhelming and intimidating to need to "carryover therapy" on your own in the summer. Calonda reminds families that speech and language practice can be generalized in your everyday environment, and can be free, easy and very natural. You don't have to plan the perfect table activity to get really enriching practice for your child. In everyday activities and simple interactions, there are so many opportunities to practice general or specific speech goals. Scavenger Hunt: Are you taking a walk outside? Are you going to the grocery store? Look for items that start with certain letter sounds, practice and emphasize this sound as you find items.Categories: Find items in your house that only fit into certain categories or belong in a certain room, label them, ask questions, and practice them.Movement: practice sounds and vocabulary in isolation by making up movements and dances while saying the sounds or words.Car rides: Play car games like I Spy or ask WH questionsHeadbands: This is a great family game you can purchase or DIY that works on a variety of skills like vocabulary, attributes, asking questions, and yes/no responses.Screen time: For many families, screen time and technology use is bound to happen, create conversation and ask questions around the game your child is playing or download a fun educational app that can build in practiceGames: Family game time uses and practices many fundamental skills such as executive functioning, planning, social, NS back and forth communicationThe most important tip: Interact together, at the end of the day interaction with your child is so powerful for practicing all of their speech and language goals. Play games, ask questions, read books, talk about your activities or meals. This creates a low demand setting where your child can generalize their speech and language goals while having fun.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:How to support speech, language, and social goals in the summer.Games and simple ideas for speech practice this summer.How parents can generalize speech practice into their everyday environment.Why practicing speech and language goals can be simple and low demand activities.Mentioned In This Episode:Broad Horizons Speech Therapy (@broadhorizonsspeech) TikTokBroad Horizons Speech Therapy - InstagramBroad Horizons Speech Therapy Speech, Language, and Education Parent Support Group of FloridaMeet Calonda Henry of Broad Horizons Speech TherapyABA Speech: Home
6/21/202228 minutes, 17 seconds
Episode Artwork

#076: Story Champs with Dr. Trina Spencer

Dr. Trina Spencer has been a Board Certified Behavior Analyst for the last 21 years and is currently a Fulbright Scholar at the Center for Augmentative and Alternative Communication in South Africa. Today, she shares about her career journey, and all of the incredible and inspiring work she is doing in the field. Dr. Spencer's goal is to encourage research-practitioner partnerships, interprofessional collaboration, and anti-ableist practices. On the day of our recording, Dr. Spencer was celebrating the launch of ECHO Autism - South Africa. ECHO Autism is a virtual learning network of providers offering real-time access to autism and behavioral experts. This advisory board of Echo Autism is the first on the continent of Africa.Among her research and fascinating work, she has designed instructional tools. Story Champs is a multi-tiered system of language instruction used in a variety of educational settings across several countries. This structured program provides robust teaching procedures that allow for use in one on one settings as well as small or large groups. Story Champs includes 65 lessons that scale from preschool to 3rd grade. Goals in this system include story retelling, personal stories, fictional stories, writing personal stories, and answering WH questions but the scope and skills included with this instruction are vast! Social academic language is promoted throughout the instruction as well as in use in the reading opportunities taken straight from the learner's social studies and science curriculum. The CUBED Assessment is a free downloadable comprehensive assessment that works great with story champs but can also be used and accessed independently of that program as well.  "The CUBED is a family of screening and progress monitoring tools that accurately, reliably, and efficiently measure decoding, language comprehension, and their product, reading. There are two main subtests of the CUBED – The Dynamic Decoding Measures and the Narrative Language Measures, which together measure 18 targets." - Language Dynamics GroupI am so excited to follow along with all the AMAZING work Dr. Spencer is doing and will continue to do in the field. Be sure to check out all the amazing linked resources she shared today to purchase Story Champs, download CUBED, and so many more freebies!#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:How Dr. Trina Spencer is bringing interprofessional collaboration and anti-ableist practices to South Africa.What is Echo Autism?What is Story Champs?All about a multi-tiered system of language instruction.Cubed: A free comprehensive assessment.How to find Dr. Trina Spencer’s plethora of resources.Mentioned In This Episode: Trina’s Tool BoxLanguage Dynamics GroupNorthern Speech ServicesABA Speech: Home
6/14/202253 minutes, 27 seconds
Episode Artwork

#075: Summer Speech Therapy Ideas

With the traditional school year coming to an end, SLPs and parents may be wondering how you can support your learners' communication throughout the summer months. I was so excited when I happened upon Bridget’s, from Speech Therapy Talk, blog post all about summer speech activities! She is on today’s episode to share 11 fun, easy, and affordable ways to get outside, enjoy the summer, AND practice communication skills. Whether you’re continuing speech therapy through the summer in a private setting, a school SLP looking for ideas to share with families, or a parent ready to continue the work from speech therapy at home this summer, these are GREAT tips that both you and your learner will be sure to enjoy!Water - Fill up a rain barrel or other water-holding receptacle and PLAY. There are opportunities for concepts like wet and dry, vocabularies like fill or dump, requesting tools as well as articulation.Bubbles - Store-bought or try to make your own giant bubbles. Practice early words like open and pop, concepts like big and small, and articulation.Sand - Kids get excited with sand. This is a great sensory activity and super engaging. Try hiding objects in the sand and labeling them when finding them, as well as trying sensory and action words.Hula Hoop - Sound of shaking them, rolling the hoop, jumping into the middle, or using as a target, hula hoops can be used as a very active tool in a diverse way to sprinkle in whatever goals you’re working on. Skill ideas: imitation, colors, action words, joint activity.Chalk - Drawing pictures, roads for toy cars or bikes, and writing words, this is an easily diversified and engaging activity that can cue any skill.Flower Walk - Walk around town or your neighborhood and look for flowers! You can count, identify colors, label, and work on articulation. Use it as a scavenger hunt with a very specific purpose!Follow the Leader - *With a Twist* - Take turns hiding items outside and give directions to find it. Skills: Prepositions and giving and understanding directions.Explorers - Go exploring, try going to a new place and use “explorer” vocabulary: Find, Discover, Look, See, etc. A great space for spontaneous communication!Nature - Collect nature items and create scenes and stories. Skills: Who/Where/Why questions, setting, imaginative play, etc. Balls - Use all different types and sizes. Roll, throw, toss, etc. This is an active and engaging activity that can be used for whatever goal you’re working on. Find an Item - Go outside and look for something specific. Skill: Thinking and reasoning. These are activities that just SCREAM summer to me. Many of these tools are free, lying around your therapy room or house, or very affordable! The great thing about these activities is the scope for practicing varying skills is huge, you can apply almost any skill or goal to these activities and have fun doing it! If you want to learn more about Bridget, her ideas, and resources, you can visit the Speech Therapy Talk website!#speechtherapy #autismWhat’s Inside:Ideas for working on communication during the summer.11 ways to support your client’s or child’s communication during the summer months.How to make working on communication FUN!Creating natural, functional practice opportunities for home.Easy, accessible, affordable activities for summer communication practice.How to get outside and practice communication.How to turn common family activities into communication practice.Mentioned In This Episode: Speech Therapy TalkSpeech Therapy Talk MembershipABA Speech: Home
6/7/202227 minutes, 27 seconds
Episode Artwork

#074: AAC and Caregiver Coaching with Dr. David Rehfeld

It can often be intimidating to get started and understand working with students with complex communication needs. Dr. David Rehfeld is a dual certified, SLP and BCBA and an assistant professor who joins me today to discuss the importance of support to students using AAC and their caregivers.The individuals who spend the most time with a client need to have the most buy-in when it comes to effectively using AAC. Dr. Rehfeld encourages this support with Caregiver Coaching. Caregivers are any of the people your client spends more time with than you, parents, guardians, teachers, and one on one support staff. The goal of Caregiver Coaching is to minimize perceived effort to make the most impact. Providers working with caregivers often have ideas of “easy” ways to integrate the AAC device into routines but should consider unique needs and preferences that assimilate into their existing life. Caregiver Coaching is provided using the Behavior Skills Training Model. BST is evidence based practice to provide instruction to facilitate success of skill mastery. Dr. Rehfeld explains it in four phases.Phase One - Understand: What are we working on? Why is it important?Phase Two - Model: Show and demonstrate the skill. Phase Three - Observe: Encourage and provide opportunities to practice.Phase Four - Feedback: What are you doing well? What can you improve on?When you’re helping someone with AAC, you’re not just helping one student but you’re helping all of the future AAC users this person works with in the future. Keep in mind the importance of rapport, and positive reinforcement by providing praise when you see caregivers doing the right things!Dr. Rehfeld is active in working with students aspiring to work in the speech pathology field. You can find him at the many conferences he attends or speaks at. Dr. Rehfeld encourages others in the field to attend conferences, seek out resources, and keep adding as many tools to their belt to help their clients as they can.#speechtheraphy #autism What’s Inside:Helping students with complex communication needs.Supporting students with AAC.How to support teachers and providers who are working with students using AAC.Why is caregiver coaching important?What is Behavior Skills Training (BST)?What are the four phases of BST?Mentioned In This Episode: Start Communicating Today Live - ABA SpeechABA Speech: Home
5/31/202232 minutes, 10 seconds
Episode Artwork

#073: Foundational Skills For Young Autistic Learners - Where to start in therapy

Many times, assessments and standardized tests don’t tell the whole story of the learner. So, what do you do when you’re overwhelmed with where to start with a younger nonspeaking or autistic learner. When I first started my career I remember being discouraged at times and with a lack of the resources available unlike what we have today, I had to find the information myself and blaze that trail. Today I want to share how I get started with these learners, to help them find their voice and start communicating today. Top 8 Foundational skills for young autistic learners: 1. Joint Attention - There is power in shared activities, a time that generates spontaneous communication. Both the therapist and the learner in an activity surrounding Literacy, Music, or Play. Check out the episode for my list of favorites!2. Imitation - Keep it fun and functional by practicing during play. The key is playing with similar items in a way that the child will want to repeat. For example, role-play with a baby doll.3. Requesting - Work on meaningful words that can make communication powerful for a student's real life. Specific requesting skills teach students that communicating can get them something!4. Matching - There are so many great skills that come along with matching like scanning and engagement. I share a bit about how I use my favorite resource and modify matching games to work with the students' level.5. Play - Play routines and leisure skills are SO important. Work on playing with fun games, shape sorting, and building around their language level.6. Following One-Step Directions - This is critical not only in school but at home. Be sure to think about your kids and how their communication impacts their day outside of the therapy room. Examples: “Put your coat on” “Stand by the door” etc.7. Labeling - Students should be comfortable talking about things in their environment. Be aware of your students' level and chronological age, is it appropriate to use flashcards? Or is it important to work on it during play?8. Fill in the Blank - “Ready…Set….___” This skill starts with, “I say something, you say something”, which opens the door for so much communication, like asking and answering questions!All of my advice today comes from my experience in private practice, where I am afforded the opportunity to work one on one. Be sure to take into account all of your circumstances, therapy opportunities, and resources when planning to individualize these skills to your students. If you have questions or want to know more about my favorite resources discussed in today’s episode, you can always contact me at ABA Speech.#ABASpeechTherapy #AutismWhat’s Inside:How to know where to start in intervention?What to do when assessments don’t deliver clear results.Helping students find their voice and start communicating today.Real Foundational Skills that can be individualized to your students.Mentioned In This Episode: Start Communicating Today Live - ABA SpeechABA Speech: Home
5/24/202235 minutes, 8 seconds
Episode Artwork

#072: Using Yoga In Speech Therapy

I think it’s so important to think outside of the box when engaging our students in therapy. Today I am talking with Kim and Amy from Talk Yoga, two SLP friends who met at work and combined their passion for speech and yoga to help their clients grow.Not only is Yoga a fun, engaging activity in itself but as a trained yoga instructor, Amy has adapted poses for her clients into what she calls Articulation Poses. Talk Yoga really believes in the whole body of the child and how all of their physical movements inform the movements inside the mouth. Articulation poses are modified versions that connect to oral motor skills for articulation and connect the body to the mouth. Another use for yoga that Amy and Kim embed into their practice is teaching vocabulary using alliteration associated with movements. For younger students, skills like labeling, imitation, and even imagination work can be really engaging through yoga. Yoga is a shared activity and leisure skill that can be benefited from across the lifespan, Amy and Kim emphasize that their work can be applied to any age range. As a therapist, it can be difficult to find shared activities that generalize into the community or home, but yoga is perfect for this. Yoga is accessible to anyone and families can enjoy yoga together as a connecting activity. One tool Amy and Kim use is allowing the student to become the teacher, having students dictate and verbalize the poses creates so many language opportunities!Yoga is a practice grounded in breathwork, calm, and mindfulness. Amy and Kim embed this into each and every one of their sessions, starting with breathwork. The best part of this is it not only calms and prepares your client, but you as the therapist can enter the best headspace to be there with your client. I know firsthand that I see spontaneous communication explode in shared activities like Yoga. Amy and Kim provide so many tips and ideas for embedding yoga into your therapy sessions, I can’t wait for you to try them!#autism #speechtheraphyWhat’s Inside:How to incorporate yoga in speech therapy.What skills can you work on with yoga in speech therapy?How to engage students and have fun in speech therapy?Embedding yoga into daily work with communication.How starting sessions with breathing exercises can benefit the therapist and the client.The importance of shared activity and leisure skills across the lifespan. Mentioned In This Episode: Start Communicating Today Live - ABA SpeechABA Speech: HomeTalk YogaTalk Yoga SLP Podcast
5/17/202237 minutes, 35 seconds
Episode Artwork

#071: School Based IEP Development For Autistic Learners

In my 20 years of experience, I have divided my time between school-based and private setting therapy. I have dedicated my career to autistic learners and today I want to share my TOP TEN tips on developing an IEP and conducting a successful smooth IEP meeting. These tips will ensure you are prepared, remain calm, and work to the benefit of the student, especially when working on more difficult cases for students who are non-typical or non-speaking.Record Review - The last comprehensive evaluation is very important. Has your student had an evaluation from an outside provider? What has the student previously worked on? Do they have prior IEPs and what do they look like?New Evaluations - What is the right evaluation for the student? My personal favorite is the VB-MAPP, I love the way it looks at language and communication. I also recommend the Functional Communication Profile - Revised, and the Assessment of Functional Living Skills is great for older students. Additionally, there are Speech Therapy Tests such as the Receptive One-Word Picture Vocabulary Test, The Expressive One-Word Picture Vocabulary Test, and the Clinical Evaluation of Language Fundamentals. Communicate with ALL Members of the Team - This includes teachers, parents, school-based providers, and any outside providers.Questions for Developing Goals - Do the targets take the learner's chronological age into account? Are the goals informed by typical development? Are these goals ambitious enough? How will achieving these goals improve the learner's quality of life? Are major barriers to progress considered? Are safety risks addressed?Shared Goals - The speech therapist collaborates with the teacher on speech goals. The goal is developed together and practice is embedded throughout the learner's day. For example, A Cooperative Leisure goal worked on across both spaces, in therapy, and in the general classroom. Specific, Measurable, and Consistent Goals - Ask yourself if the goals are specific? Are they measurable? And if another teacher, parent, or professional read them, would they make sense? Foundational Skills are important for younger, nonspeaking learners. These can include joint attention, imitation, requesting, and matching. For older students, ask can goals be tied to leisure and vocation.Data Collection - Consider how you're going to take data while you're writing the goals.Baseline Data - For autistic learners especially, be sure to include baseline data in the present section of the IEP. Baseline data is crucial to inform goals and to show progress.Send a Draft Home - Get Feedback! Some parents may have lawyers, advocates, outside providers, etc. It is important to make sure all members of the team are aware of the IEP goals and incorporate and embed the feedback that you can.Hold the Meeting, Work with the Team, and Create an Amazing Plan for your Students!#austism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Top 10 Tips for a successful IEP Process.Helpful tips and strategies to use today.All about school-based IEP development for autistic learners.Working on an IEP with a large team.How to handle non-typical or difficult situations in an IEP meeting.Mentioned In This Episode: ABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today Live
5/10/202232 minutes, 16 seconds
Episode Artwork

#070: Gratitude and Mindful Habits with Marie Muratalla

Are you feeling stressed? Are you feeling like you just can’t achieve that work-life balance? May tends to be a tough time for many providers, educators, and even parents. Today I talk with Marie Muratalla, SLP, Podcaster, Mindset Coach, and creator of the Say Thanks More Gratitude Journal.Like many of us, in 2020 when the COVID shutdown began, Marie struggled to bear the weight of her job. In a time when her job was no longer what it was, she battled her personal identity and where that separated from her work identity. This began her business, grounded in the practice of gratitude which she was always passionate about, Marie created Thanks More Gratitude Journals and advocated for the use of mindful habits to set boundaries and create joy.Marie’s Mindful Habits1. Daily Gratitude Practice: Try journaling or starting small by writing down one thing you’re thankful for. It can be at any part of your day and can be as simple as a dedicated 5 minutes during your morning coffee or before bed. 2. Morning Meditation: Marie practices 3 minutes of meditation each morning, it doesn’t have to be the same amount of time. It can be whatever works for you. But locking that time in to ground yourself and let go of all other thoughts for just a moment is so important.3. Bring Presence into your Routine: Whether it's even yoga, affirmations, journaling, meditation….Set intentions and a time to be present for yourself. Marie shared some great apps that she uses to build these routines into her day. Something so many struggle with is work-life balance. Marie’s number one solution to this is setting boundaries. It can be hard but try to focus on where you are at the moment, and not bring thoughts about work home or into your weekend. For Marie, this means removing her work email from her phone and being firm with colleagues when they ask her questions outside of work. Mindfulness and gratitude practices are research-based and are proven to reduce stress and increase joy and productivity. Studies have shown that by participating in a gratitude practice, like journaling, you are increasing serotonin levels and decreasing cortisol levels. This practice reduces stress because you are able to take ownership of your emotions and feelings and you are putting it into a safe place.  The more you practice these, the more you bring yourself to that balance present place.Try these tips yourself by introducing these positive habits one small step at a time. If you’d like to learn more about Marie Muratalla or the Say Thanks More Community, you can find her on her website or on social media.#autism #speechtheraphyWhat’s Inside:How can a daily gratitude practice benefit your mindset?How can you shift your mindset to create balance with work?Tips for creating mindful habits in your daily life.How burnout can create stress in work and life.How a mind-shift set can effectively reduce burnout and benefit mental health.Why it is important to set boundaries to create a work-life balance.Mentioned In This Episode: Thanks MorrisMarie on (@thanksmorris) • Instagram photos and videosMarie on (@thanksmorris) TikTokDown DogI am - Daily Affirmations on the App StoreAtomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad OnesABA Speech: HomeStart Communicating Today
5/3/202234 minutes, 20 seconds
Episode Artwork

#069: A Family’s Autism Journey- A Chat with Theresa Richard

I have been following Theresa Richard’s business journey for a while and when I recently learned about her son’s autism diagnosis, I had to learn more about her. Theresa is an SLP, Board Certified Specialist in swallowing and swallowing disorders, Business owner, Podcaster, Author,  and creator of the MedSLP Collective. She started her business in 2013, began blogging in 2014, and moved into the podcast world in 2017. I have really enjoyed following her work and Theresa does an excellent job disseminating information in a lesser-known field.Theresa proclaims that she has such a passion for helping children with special needs. She recently sold one of her mobile FEES businesses and donated all proceeds to the foundation, set up in her son’s honor.  Theresa’s son was born with an extremely rare chromosomal abnormality. There was no concrete syndrome which was extremely lonely to not be able to find a support group or community. Her journey brought her family on a big move from New York to Florida to seek out therapy for her son at age 5. During the assessments to receive a therapy placement, her son received the shocking diagnosis of Autism.  While this knowledge was surprising and unexpected, it affected their lives in a positive way. This diagnosis opened the door to a whole new world of support. In Florida, under this diagnosis, Theresa has been able to find the perfect school and specialized therapists that see him at school. A team working toward the benefit of your child is so important, and Theresa speaks out to families to let them know that facilities and schools, and therapists who are ready to work toward that are out there. Theresa on her journey has had a variety of experiences and she shares her advice for providers from a parent's perspective: open-ended, nonjudgmental communication is vital. She makes these conversations, questions, and discussions an important part of her son’s therapy plans. Theresa’s parting words for parents new to the journey of autism, is to not be afraid to reach out. Social media and groups can be a negative place but don’t go there, surround yourself in the positive groups and the positive voices. As an autism mother it can be scary and lonely but there are people out there who want to help and support you!You can follow Theresa Richard and her journey by checking out her website or following her on social media!#autism #speectherapyWhat’s Inside:Theresa Richards's business journey as an SLP.How to find the school right for your child's needs?Utilizing external therapists in a school setting?Parent advice for SLPs and therapists.A family's unique autism journey.Parent to parent advice on a diagnosis of autism. The importance of support in handling a diagnosis.Mentioned In This Episode:Thank you to this episode's sponsor, Mightier. We make video games that help kids build their emotional strength. Learn how to #beMightier at www.mightier.com— MedSLP Collective— Theresa Richard Medical SLP— TheresaRichardSLP on Instragram— Theresa Richard on Facebook— So You're Having Trouble Swallowing Paperback – August 11, 2021— ABA Speech: Home 
4/26/202230 minutes, 52 seconds
Episode Artwork

#068: Annie DiVello - Supporting Students With Selective Mutism

I am always interested in learning more about the variety of students I can help. Today I am interviewing Annie DiVello, an SLP who specializes in Selective Mutism. At the time Annie was in grad school, it was believed that selective mutism was more of a mental health disorder and that SLPs were not involved, but even now there is still a real lack of information or resources both in school and in private practice.What is Selective Mutism?Selective Mutism (SM)  is essentially a phobia of speaking, along with comorbidities. This fear of speaking can be attached to a singular person, people, or places, during certain activities. Selective Mutism often occurs along with anxiety disorders or other speech disorders.Supporting Learners with Selective Mutism:Annie discusses the importance of a ‘Round Table’ of support for students with Selective Mutism. These learners cannot be worked with in isolation and should be supported by a variety of professionals that are experts in the complex variety of needs of students with selective mutism. When it comes to assessment, Annie directs the question about performance vs. skills and ability. A student's performance is not always indicative of their skills, especially in the case of Selective Mutism. Annie provides some tips for SLPs to collect this information, including parent interviews and respectful videoing. Selective Mutism can be effectively diagnosed with a multidisciplinary team at the age of 30 months. Getting started with therapy for students with Selective Mutism:Who is the student and what are their needsBring in Selective Mutism expertsImplement a comprehensive plan with monthly progress monitoringWork on communication confidence: one on one work with a key workerUtilize an integrated team approachSmall steps programming, beware of rapid exposure As a school-based clinician, you may not come across students with Selective Mutism,  but working with experts like Annie DiVello is such a key piece in developing a framework for your therapy with students with more complex needs. This episode is packed with great tips for SLPs working with learners of all ages. Annie is an ASHA-approved CEU trainer, you can find out more about her and her work on her website, AnnieDiVello.com.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:What is Selective Mutism?How to build a roundtable of support for learners with selective mutism.Being a ‘Brave Voice Coach’ for learners with selective mutism.Strategies for younger and older learners with selective mutism.Mentioned In This Episode: Annie DiVello Consulting ABA Speech: Home
4/19/202252 minutes, 51 seconds
Episode Artwork

#067: A Late Diagnosis of Autism with Billy Mayfair

I love any opportunity to chat with adults with autism who can share their insight on diagnosis, support, and living life with autism. Billy Mayfair is a top professional golfer in the United States, who found his diagnosis late in life in 2019. Today he shares his journey in early life and the concerns that led to his evaluation, and how those answers have helped him find the support he needed.Growing up golf was a safe haven, he found joy in being alone. Unlike those who receive an early diagnosis, because Autism was not on the radar Bill did not have support in school. He found school to be very difficult and struggled all the way through. Billy's high school counselor even told him not to try to go to college, that he needed to just go out and get a job and struggle for the rest of his life. This was a huge motivator for him, propelling him into completing college and into his golf career. Billy's wife was instrumental in seeking a diagnosis. There was a pivotal moment during a golf tournament in which he was wrongly disqualified. When he did not comprehend what was happening and he wasn't speaking up for himself, his wife's concerns pushed him to an evaluation. Billy shares that even though he knew something was going on, he was reluctant to seek answers and even took weeks to actually read the findings report. One of Billy's key struggles throughout his adult life has been with thought delay presenting as unpleasant facial expressions. Oftentimes when he needed more time to think about something, he looked defiant and angry. He's learned that it's okay and even important to ask for more time to think or process. It's really key to self-advocacy. With this late in life diagnosis, Billy has adapted to new support such as seeing a neuropsychologist and even a nutritionist who is helping him connect the dots between his diet and his brain. Billy and his wife are currently working on starting a foundation to support athletes with autism and their family members.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:What support helped Billy in school and early in life?The importance of self-advocacy.What concerns can lead to a late-in-life autism diagnosis?Supports Billy seeks as an adult with autism.Mentioned In This Episode: ABA Speech: HomeBilly Mayfair on TwitterThank you to this episode's sponsor Mightier - We make video games that help kids build their emotional strength.  Learn how to #beMightier at https://www.mightier.com/autismoutreach 
4/12/202221 minutes, 17 seconds
Episode Artwork

#066: A Discussion About Ableism and Neurodiversity with Haley Moss

On today's podcast, I had the opportunity to learn from Haley Moss. Haley is an author, lawyer, educator, speaker, and is also autistic. In this episode, she shares her perspective on important issues in the autism and neurodivergent community, as we have a conversation surrounding inclusivity in therapy and society.  "Be yourself, but not like that".  It can be extremely exhausting for adults to keep up with behaviors that are seen as typical and don't come naturally to them. Haley compares Neurodivergent social skills to being bilingual. It's not that they don't have social skills, they are just different and no matter what or how they try to make them "alike" neurotypical individuals it will always come out with an "autistic accent".  She emphasizes the importance of teaching the reason behind typical social skills as cultural needs versus them being "better" or "normal". Everything someone does has a reason behind it and tying trust and understanding to that is really helpful. What is Neurodiversity?Neurodiversity is a difference in cognition in which everyone's brain works differently.  Neurotypical brains operate in ways that may be expected in a "normal" manner. Neurodivergent is a scope of operation involving the brain out of the box, outside of what would be "expected" ways to include autism, ADHD, mental health, intellectual disabilities, and acquired disabilities such as traumatic injury or illness. What is Ableism?Haley shares a definition from the Center for Disability Rights, "Ableism is a set of beliefs or practices that devalue and discriminate against people with physical, intellectual, or psychiatric disabilities and often rest on the assumption that people with disabilities need to be fixed in one way or another." Ableism is much more prevalent in society than people realize, especially in the manner of accessibility and that neurodivergent individuals are not given seats at the table for key discussions. Practicing Empathy in Your Therapy SessionsAs professionals, we truly want to help people. One of my goals with this podcast is to help therapists and providers do better by knowing better. Haley shares some of her tips from a neurodivergent perspective on how to be empathic as a provider. Behavior happens for a reason. Behavior can mean so many things, it's important to apply that by taking the whole person into account.Describe individuals' specific high and low support needs. These can evolve over time but when aware of these needs, individuals can advocate for themselves and other services can provide support where possible. I learned so much during this chat with Haley. If you'd like to learn more or connect with her, you can find her on her website and all social media platforms.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:What is ableism?What is neurodivergent?How to be inclusive in your therapy practice.How to practice with empathy.What does true acceptance look like?Autism and social justice.Mentioned In This Episode: Haley MossABA Speech: Home
4/5/202254 minutes, 7 seconds
Episode Artwork

#065: Discussing Dyslexia with Jeannette Roberes

SLPs have such a broad scope. We get so much training in graduate school but creating specializations based on your passions really happens through your own research and work out in the field. So there are many areas that fall under the scope of speech therapy that not all SLPs understand completely or feel comfortable with. As my listeners know, Autism has become my area of focus, so I really did not have a lot of awareness or understanding about Dyslexia. This chat with Jeannette Roberes was so educating and informative for me.Jeannette is an SLP, software engineer, and educator who specializes in Dyslexia. Dyslexia is a combination of characteristics involving reading, writing, and talking. An individual with Dyslexia is going to struggle in one or all of these areas. Symptoms can include late talking, slow to learn words, and a severe delay in reading.Jeannette has made some great strides in advocating and educating on Dyslexia and how to support her students. She and her colleagues are working on a book to educate SLPs on how to appropriately assess, treat, and diagnose students presenting with Dyslexia. Her tips for intervention for Dyslexia revolve around a multisensory structured language approach involving decoding, fluency training, vocabulary, and comprehension. She says that a successful session is tapping into the essential components of teaching reading. Jeanette talks about the big five: Phonemic Awareness, Alphabetic Principle, Fluency, Vocabulary, and Comprehension. When working with Dyslexia or any literacy based skill, books are your greatest resource, there are so many activities that can be planned around one book even over the course of 4 sessions. It also instills a love of reading that is so important. Jeannette is really passionate about using diverse inclusive books in your literacy opportunities, because in our therapy sessions we are preparing students for a world in which they will interact with individuals who don’t always look like them. She calls books sliding glass doors, a stepping stone or path into a bigger world. She encourages families and therapists to read books reflecting both disabilities and different cultures. You can find out more about Jeannette on all social media platforms by searching in Bearly Articulating and check out her book, Technical Difficulties: Why Dyslexic Narratives Matter In Tech, available on Amazon. #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What is Dyslexia?How to support students with Dyslexia.How to embed literacy in speech sessions.The importance of valuing diversity in literacy.Mentioned In This Episode:  Bearly Articulating Teaching Resources | Teachers Pay TeachersAmazon.com: Technical Difficulties: Why Dyslexic Narratives Matter In Tech eBook : Washington, Jeannette: Kindle Store ABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource  
3/29/202234 minutes, 55 seconds
Episode Artwork

#064: SLP Services in an ABA Setting

Today, I am providing 15 strategies for SLPs working in an ABA setting. I have had the opportunity to work in ABA settings in addition to traditional schools. Whether you're new to the ABA world or thinking about taking a position in a specialized setting, these tips are some that I find so helpful for you, your colleagues, and your clients. Learn about your work setting: Understand your role and how it fits into the existing set up of the facility. Do not hesitate to ask the important questions!Build rapport with staff: Sometimes collaboration comes easy and sometimes it can be difficult. Get to know your team members and build relationships to facilitate working together.Learn about the science of Applied Behavior Analysis: Onboarding is going to differ from setting to setting, if it's new to you, it's important your facility is offering you proper training. I offer two courses with ABA Speech, Help Me Find My Voice and Start Communicating Today, that are great options.Learn about common assessments: If you're new to an ABA setting, understanding testing from the BCBA side can really change your approach to therapy. My favorite is the VB-MAPP but there are others.Provide information about speech therapy: Keep it positive and disseminate your goals and scientific approach. Always frame it with your client's best interest in mind.Feel comfortable with the jargon: There are so many words, you may or may not use them in conversation but you need to understand what you're talking about in a clinical setting. Think about creating shared goals: Once you understand the assessment, you can create goals with other teachers. The power of communication is incredible and it is important to collaborate and share goals across the setting.Embed communication across the learner's day: Communication takes place all day long, students can really flourish when they have more opportunity for practice and data is being tracked by all staff.Streamline your data collection: Many providers take data in all sorts of ways, when a student is working on a goal across settings, keep data collection in one place so that it is accessible and functional.Have access to your students' behavior plan (if applicable): Understand how to plan antecedently for students' unsafe or problem behavior. Make a copy and keep it on hand. Additionally, plan your environment accordingly, you want to feel comfortable serving all of your students.Collaborate: If there are other staff members who are going to be having a lot of time with your students, take the time to teach them about communication. These are the staff that are the most critical to building rapport with. You are the team!Think about parent communication: This communication is going to differ greatly in a specialized setting versus a traditional school. Stay in the loop of what is common practice for your facility and what parents need from you as far as communication goes.How are you providing service to students: Structure of therapy and instruction will differ depending on students needs. This can be pushing in, pulling out, one on one, and group therapy.The SLP and the BCBA ethical code both discuss collaboration: This is important, there are barriers, and I'm here to support you. Agree to disagree: We do not have to agree on everything but one thing we can agree on is, we want to help our students. Make decisions based on data. If you're looking for more in depth information, you can check out my courses Help Me Find My Voice and Start Communicating Today. Also, be on the lookout in the coming months for my newest ASHA-approved course on SLPs in the ABA setting! I am also available for Discovery Calls if I can be of more service to you. See you next time! #autism #speechtherapy 
3/22/202240 minutes, 6 seconds
Episode Artwork

#063: Working With Students With Challenging Behavior with Kelle Rich

Today I had the pleasure of talking with my BCBA supervisor and trailblazer in the field. Kelle was introduced to the world of autism at a really young age, which led into special education and continued on to her large body of work. In this episode she is sharing with us, from her wealth of knowledge, about how to work with students with problem behavior and what to do to support learners when it becomes a barrier to therapy.The first step, with any therapy case, is to understand your learner. You can do this by reading the files, interviewing the parents, teachers, and other providers, and talking to the learner. You really want to know who this child is, what they like, and how they work so that you can pair your environment and therapy up to these things. Take a deep breath, take your time, and just build that relationship.If you've built that rapport and problem behavior is still occurring, you can analyze the appropriate next steps. When tier 1 or non-dangerous behavior is occurring it is important to move forward with therapy. Note it, track data on it, but keep doing what you're doing. Try to avoid accidentally reinforcing that negative behavior. But what if it's more? What is an FBA?A Functional Behavior Assessment, is a formal assessment process that must be requested as a part of an IEP. This process is worked through the team of providers, parents, and anyone who works with the learner. Next, a direct observation occurs to track patterns and antecedents. Finally, an actual analysis may be necessary where the learner will be tested. We do all this to guide us to an accurate behavior intervention plan.What is the BIP?A Behavior Intervention Plan written into an IEP to guide and shape therapy. A BIP can not be created without an FBA. Whoever develops the BIP needs to be the one to train and support staff on how to support the learner.When it comes to these plans and conversations, they are often occurring because things are not going well which can cause some contention between professionals. Kelle and I both discuss how we find it helpful to remind the team that we are in fact on the same team and that the common goal is to help the learner!To close out this awesome interview, Kelle shares a little bit about her upcoming conference, The Verbal Behavior Conference. This began in 2018, became virtual throughout COVID, and is occurring both live and virtual this year. There are a ton of great speakers and leaders in the field and so many trending topics on the billet.#autism #speectherapy What’s Inside:What is the FBA?What is a BIP?What can you do when problem behavior becomes a barrier to learning?How can speech therapists support students with problem behavior?Why does problem behavior occur?Mentioned in this Episode: ABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource Verbal Behavior Conference
3/15/202240 minutes, 15 seconds
Episode Artwork

#062: Autism Early Intervention- Joint Attention

There is a strong bond between joint attention and both receptive and expressive language skills. When we work on joint attention, we are showing that our learners' communication is powerful! I am sharing a few tips and ideas that I use to build connections before communication while working on joint attention goals.These activities involve shared activities through playing with toys, singing songs, and reading books. It is okay if your student isn't ready to fully engage when you introduce these activities, note their baseline data, and move forward with goals. You will be amazed to see the transformation and excitement over these simple activities.Toys:Playing with toys in therapy is all about creating an interaction in a semi-structured environment. Remember to use simple language and allow for natural curiosity and play and not bombard with questions. Examples of toys I love to use:Car and car track Mini ObjectsFarm SetLiteracy:Build excitement around the book, use books with repetition, and if your kids like it try an animated voice which can be really fun.A few books I love to keep in my therapy bag that is a great success for joint attention are, Pete the Cat and his White Shoes, Brown Bear, The Very Hungry Caterpillar, and Chicka Chicka Boom Boom.Music:Students love songs, they are familiar and create engagement. I also love to use visuals that can be just laminated pictures or little toys that match the activity of the song. It can also be engaging to sing songs that have motions for the words.Songs I love:Old MacdonaldWheels on the BusHead, Shoulders, Knees, and ToesIt can be difficult to keep data and set goals around these abstract ideas, be sure to check out my goal bank on ABA speech. I hope you love these ideas and get used to them in your next therapy session!#autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:How to increase learner engagement?What is joint attention?How to embed joint attention across a student's day.Where to start with joint attention.Integrating shared activities into therapy.Why should you focus on the connection before communication? Mentioned In This Episode:IEP Goals for Students with Autism - ABA Speech ABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource 
3/8/202235 minutes, 30 seconds
Episode Artwork

#061: 10 Strategies For Supporting Autistic Learners In Middle and High School

I am excited to share my top 10 tips and strategies for supporting middle and high school-aged students. This is an area where I feel not a lot of information is available. I am very fortunate to work with kids across the lifespan from preschool ages in my private practice to middle and high school in the school setting. While I generally focus on helping autistic learners, these tips can be great for anyone working with older students. 1. Build rapport.This can be difficult and likely won’t happen overnight but it will greatly affect your relationship and effectiveness with the learner.2. Analyze your service delivery options.Your students likely have a large array of needs, how can you change the environment, setting, and therapy approach to meet those needs?3. Know who is on the team.Do your students see other therapists or other providers? Keep communication open and available for all the team members for your learner’s success.4. Focus on independence.Independence looks different for every learner and encouraging this can be done in a variety of big and small ways. 5. Create shared goals.It’s great to collaborate with other teachers and share goals, these can be developed together and supported across settings.6. Analyze the function of your goals.Always ask, how are these goals important across the lifespan? Know why you’re working on something and the scope of sequence to accomplish these goals.7. Consider working on communication as it relates to vocation and leisure.As we get older, vocation and leisure become increasingly important, students should feel really comfortable in these areas. 8. Analyze data collection.Use a variety of data collection related to goals in different forms. Self-monitoring can also be a great tool for data collection.9. Go over goals with your students.At the middle and high school, students become part of their goal-setting team, encourage participation in IEPs and keep them aware of the why behind their therapy goals. This is a great time to share how you're going to support them and what to expect.10. Reach out with any questions.Utilize resources available to you! I would love to help and share the resources I’ve created as well as support through a Discovery call. I hope you found these tips helpful. Please reach out if I can support you!#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:How can you support middle and high school, autistic learners?Can build a rapport affect therapy?Why should older students focus on independence?Should older students be involved in their goal planning?What resources are available for older autistic learners? Mentioned In This Episode:—Double Up Vocabulary and Leisure Game - ABA Speech—Vocational Binder—Discovery Call —ABA Speech: Home—ABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource  
3/1/202230 minutes, 51 seconds
Episode Artwork

#060: How To Help Autistic Learners with Apraxia?

Apraxia is something a lot of my listeners are really interested in learning about. I had Dr. Edythe Strand on the two-part episode, number 44. Today Dr. Jennifer Moore, SLP, and co-owner of Brave Wings Therapy brings us some strategies on understanding Apraxia with autism and applying the interventions to autistic learners. What is Apraxia and is it common in autism?Childhood Apraxia Speech is when the brain has difficulty planning and directing the muscles in a sequence to produce speech. Students with Apraxia might have difficult transitions from one syllable to another, you might see oral groping, vowel distortion, or errors in prosody. Autism rates have risen, current studies show approximately 1 in 44 children is diagnosed with autism. Although research does vary, within that subpopulation there is a coexistence of Apraxia in about ⅔ of those cases. How can Apraxia interventions be applied to autistic learners?Many SLP’s struggles because there are great evidence-based assessments such as DTTC and REST for apraxia. However, with these approaches, there are many prerequisite skills required for an authentic, best practice result that do not align with the “box” our autistic learners need. Effective assessments for these learners will require outside-of-the-box thinking using a mix of these approaches with modifications unique to each learner.When assessing an autistic learner, we really have to be dynamic in our approach. This means looking at sensory differences, current communication style, AAC use, receptive language, and cognitive ability and assessing each of these areas. Jennifer suggests structuring the therapy environment and before therapy, activities to be conducive to the learner and the assessments. Picking functional targets for autistic learners?Jennifer uses the term “Power Words” as an important start for learning targets. This means words that are of high use for them in their everyday life that are going to be heard and used often with a big impact. With these functional words, SLPs can look at what the student already has in terms of the sounds and oral motor skills and how to shape it. The Principles for Motor Learning guides instruction, practice, and retention for learners with apraxia and Jennifer provides great guidance on this.This was such an informative episode on modifying assessment and treatment for Apraxia in autistic learners. You can find out more about Jennifer and her work on Instagram, Facebook, and on the Brave Wings Therapy website.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:What are Apraxia assessments?How sensory differences that may affect autistic learners.How to pick targets for autistic learners.Communication when working on interdisciplinary teams.Mentioned in this episode: Don’t miss Pyramid Educational Consultants’ Second Annual FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th and 5th, 2022! Pyramid’s international team of behavior analysts, and dually certified speech pathologists, led by Andy Bondy and Lori Frost, the developers of PECS, have created all new and expanded content that includes a broad range of practical information related to the field of behavior analysis. Day one will focus on content related to educational programming and program development. Day two of the virtual conference will present information related to behavior analysis and communication. Earn up to 8.0 BACB CEUs including one ethics and one supervision credit when you attend the full virtual conference. To learn more about attending the FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th & 5th,  visit pecsusa.com! — Dr. Moore on Instagram— Brave Wings Therapy
2/22/202236 minutes, 3 seconds
Episode Artwork

#059: 5 Proactive Behavior Strategies With Sasha Long of The Autism Helper

I often get requests for how therapists can help students who are engaging in problem behaviors that create a barrier to learning. In this interview, my colleague Sasha Long of The Autism Helper shared her “Five Favorite Antecedent Strategies”. If you’re not sure what antecedent means, Sasha gives a great explanation. For the purpose of this list, antecedent means to be proactive. This is a list of best practices that when used to their fullest potential can help teachers, therapists, and even parents become proactive instead of reactive in the face of problem behavior. 1. Evaluate the Physical Environment. Remove elements of distraction or possible sensory overload. We might not always be able to remove it all together, but we can minimize or be aware to be of support to the learner.2. Routines. Kids and adults thrive off of routine and knowing what to expect. Be sure to include several grounding activities throughout the day. We’re all human and things come up but how can you plan ahead to maintain a routine even when there is a change in the day?3. Schedules. We often have schedules for the whole day but mini schedules are the secret sauce. Try to break down the steps into every group and activity. If you can associate each activity with a visual cue in the order it happens. Keep it simple and applicable to the receptive language skills of the learners.4. Visuals. We all use them, but, why are you using them? Take a look at the receptive language skills of your learners and figure out what kind of visuals they need. Make visuals a purposeful strategy as opposed to pictures used for the sake of taking up wall space. 5. Reinforcement of replacement behaviors. When you build up good behavior, you’re not going to need to be reactive. Provide praise when students are engaged in positive replacement behaviors. Find the good even if it's small!Our end goal when working with students and implementing this list to see an increase in communication and a decrease in problem behaviors. Sasha is a wealth of information. You can find out more about her and her work through her blog and podcast, The Autism Helper. #autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Proactive strategies for students who engage in problem behavior. What to do when problem behavior becomes a barrier to learning.How to help students who engage in unsafe behavior during therapy.What are Sasha Long’s Top 5 Antecedent Intervention Strategies?How  to set up your therapy environment for the safety of your students.Mentioned In This Episode:Don’t miss Pyramid Educational Consultants’ Second Annual FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th and 5th, 2022! Pyramid’s international team of behavior analysts, and dually certified speech pathologists, led by Andy Bondy and Lori Frost, the developers of PECS, have created all new and expanded content that includes a broad range of practical information related to the field of behavior analysis. Day one will focus on content related to educational programming and program development. Day two of the virtual conference will present information related to behavior analysis and communication. Earn up to 8.0 BACB CEUs including one ethics and one supervision credit when you attend the full virtual conference. To learn more about attending the FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th & 5th  visit, pecsusa.com!The Autism HelperABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource 
2/15/202233 minutes, 15 seconds
Episode Artwork

Learn About the Autism Connection (Special Episode)

I am announcing a huge upcoming event, the Autism Connection. If you are an SLP, BCBA, teacher, or even a parent, this is going to be a great event. I partner with Sasha Long who’s also a BCBA and she’s got really great strategies that are actionable and applicable. This is a live PD in which participants will receive CEUs and certificates of attendance. Be sure to check out the talking points, event schedule, and get registered!Learn about the Autism Connection. The inaugural LIVE PD event is taking place on March 12th. Brought to you by ABA SPEECH and The Autism Helper. A LIVE ASHA approved and ACE event! Schedule: (Eastern Time) Time: 9:45 am -10:00 am Topic: Welcome Presenters: With Rose and Sasha Time: 10:00 am - 11:00 am Topic: Make the Environment a Tool not an Obstacle Presenters: Sasha Long M.A. BCBATime: 11:00 am - 12:00 pm  Topic: The Performative Power of Language in Therapeutic Spaces: Steps Towards Neurodivergent Affirming PracticesPresenters: Mari Cerda BCBA LBA Time: 12:00 pm -12:15 pm  Topic: Break Presenters: Break Time: 12:15 pm - 1:15 pm Topic: Modified Play and Leisure Skills For Preschool and Elementary Aged Students Presenters: Rose Griffin M.A. CCC/SLP BCBATime:  1:15 pm - 2:30 pm Topic: LUNCH BREAKPresenters: LUNCH BREAKTime:  2:30 pm- 3:30 pm  Topic: AAC Intervention: Supporting Communication Partners and AAC Users in Naturalistic Communication EnvironmentsPresenters: Kate Grandbois, MS, CCC-SLPBCBATime:  3:30 pm - 4:30 pm   Topic: The Best Kept Secrets of Collaborative IEP Goal Writing Presenters: Stephanie DeLussey and Rose Griffin M.A. CCC/SLP BCBATime:  4:30 pm - 4:45 pm  Topic: Wrap Up and CEU RemindersPresenters: Rose and Sasha Get Registered for the Autism Connection Now!Thank you to our sponsor: Don’t miss Pyramid Educational Consultants’ Second Annual FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th and 5th, 2022! Pyramid’s international team of behavior analysts, and dually certified speech pathologists, led by Andy Bondy and Lori Frost, the developers of PECS, have created all new and expanded content that includes a broad range of practical information related to the field of behavior analysis. Day one will focus on content related to educational programming and program development. Day two of the virtual conference will present information related to behavior analysis and communication. Earn up to 8.0 BACB CEUs including one ethics and one supervision credit when you attend the full virtual conference. To learn more about attending the FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th & 5th, visit pecsusa.com!What’s Inside:What is the Autism Connection, Live PD event?How can you attend this live event?Can you receive CEUs or other certificates by attending the Autism Connection?All about a great live event for SLPs, BCBAs, teachers, and parents. Mentioned In This Episode:Get Registered for the Autism Connection Now! ABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource 
2/10/202213 minutes
Episode Artwork

#058: How Can I Support Older Autistic Learners- Strategies with Jared Stewart

We focus a lot on therapy for young learners, but what about when they grow up? Support for older autistic learners and adults is so important. In this episode, I interviewed Jared Stewart, autistic adult, professional, and BCBA. For many, characteristics of autism may not be apparent until life demands exceed their skill set. He shares his experience in the school system, how bullying, and the skill demands affected him. He finished his 7th-grade year with a refusal to return to school and spent the next year doing correspondence school from his bedroom. He began school again at the start of 9th grade with the realization that everything he wanted to do was on the other side of education. Jared talks about a calendar planner one of his teachers helped him create that really changed the way he managed school, giving him a new sense of control. At that point, he learned that he could learn the systems of success. Creating systems is a really great tool for autistic individuals and with the mastery of these, anyone can learn to do bigger and better things. From his first-hand experience as a high school student to college student, Jared has excellent insight on the needs for public school support and beyond. Focusing on strengths and building up the confidence of your autistic learners is key to their success as they move from school to the real world. Additionally, helping learners understand their unique challenges and working on them is important too. Masking is a hot topic in the autism world today, Jared shared his take on what he calls authentic masking as an important skill to connect your authentic self with your neurotypical community. Jared pointed out that we often forget that autism is a developmental delay. As autistic individuals get older, brain development begins to catch up to neurotypicals and they can really do some powerful things. He sees it first hand with his work at the Scenic View Academy, a residential academy in which autistic adults live, work and get paid for their work. The school customizes plans for students that last on average about 2-3 years. In this program, they learn all the skills to function and keep themselves safe in daily life physically, mentally, emotionally, and sexually. This was a great chat about focusing on the transition mindset when preparing autistic learners for beyond public school.  Jared is so knowledgeable and passionate about helping others. If you’re interested in the Scenic View Academy you can find out more information online or if you’d like, you can get in touch with Jared who is happy to help in any way he can.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Making school more impactful for all learners.How to help older students understand their strengths.How we can frame how we will support older students.How to identify the areas students might need support after school and why.Mentioned In This Episode:Don’t miss Pyramid Educational Consultants’ Second Annual FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th and 5th, 2022! Pyramid’s international team of behavior analysts, and dually certified speech pathologists, led by Andy Bondy and Lori Frost, the developers of PECS, have created all new and expanded content that includes a broad range of practical information related to the field of behavior analysis. Day one will focus on content related to educational programming and program development. Day two of the virtual conference will present information related to behavior analysis and communication. Earn up to 8.0 BACB CEUs including one ethics and one supervision credit when you attend the full virtual conference. To learn more about attending the FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th & 5th,  visit pecsusa.com!ScenicView Academy
2/8/202240 minutes, 13 seconds
Episode Artwork

#057: Speech Therapy For Autistic Students - Where To Start With Intervention

As Speech-Language Pathologists, it can be overwhelming to create a therapy plan for learners with no speech at all. Where do you get started? In this episode, I talk with Terri Smith. She is an SLP and the founder and owner of Bluebird Speech Therapy and Consulting Services.Help Me Find My Voice and Start Communicating Now are two courses I offer online for professionals and parents. Terri shared with me how she found ABA Speech and has attended and utilized these resources. She describes her takeaway from these courses as a “Road Map” for therapy with autistic or nonverbal learners. These courses provide real actionable tips, step-by-step ideas for therapy, and most important assessments that focus on communication skills that are crucial for nonverbal learners.Requesting is an important skill that Terri focuses on in her therapy. She finds that this gives her learners power by realizing their communication means something! Additionally, it's all about the fun, child-led activities built into social and gameplay that make a big difference, especially when working with nonverbal students. One rule she works by is planning therapy based on learners' developmental age, not their chronological age.Terri works with students with autism to support functional communication and behavior strategies through play-based activities. As a consultant, she also supports other professionals in the field. Oftentimes, SLPs and BCBAs work together simultaneously with families and clients. Even myself as both can sometimes disagree on treatment plans. It’s important to remember when it comes to speech that the SLP is the expert, but also to continue to have that professional dialogue. Regardless of the points of disagreement when a professional is passionate about something it is obvious that their intention is just what's best for the learner.Every student we see is very different with very different needs, it is important for therapy to match that and change client to client. This is such a great interview in which Terri and I talk about some great tips, tools, and guidelines for getting started with therapy, as well as the big difference my online courses can make!What’s Inside:How can ABA Speech online courses help SLPs and other professionals?Where to get started in intervention.How you can help your students communicate.How to bring fun into therapy.The assessments and roadmap for beginning therapy.Mentioned In This Episode:Thank You To Our Sponsor: Don’t miss Pyramid Educational Consultant’s Second Annual FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th and 5th, 2022! Pyramid’s international team of behavior analysts, and dually certified speech pathologists, led by Andy Bondy and Lori Frost, the developers of PECS, have created all new and expanded content that includes a broad range of practical information related to the field of behavior analysis. Day one will focus on content related to educational programming and program development. Day two of the virtual conference will present information related to behavior analysis and communication. Earn up to 8.0 BACB CEUs including one ethics and one supervision credit when you attend the full virtual conference. To learn more about attending the FUNctional Behavior Conference on April 4th & 5th,  visit pecsusa.com!Pecsusa.combluebirdspeechtherapy@gmail.com Bluebird Speech on Facebook Facebook: @TerriSmithSLPInstagram: @BlueBirdSpeechABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource 
2/1/202234 minutes, 45 seconds
Episode Artwork

#056: How To Help Parents Feel Supported On The IEP Team with Emily Estades

I always love to get parents' perspectives but it’s not often I get to hear the unique view of a parent turned professional. In this episode, I interview Emily Estades, my friend, graduate student, parent, and SLP.  Emily is the mother of two children, her daughter, the oldest, has a dual diagnosis of Autism and Rett Syndrome, and her son with Anxiety and ADHD. Her journey started with her daughter's many appointments, meetings, and therapies, eventually inspiring her career as an SLP.Prior to dealing with speech therapists for her daughter, Emily remembers speech therapy as something kids got pulled out for in the middle of class but not much else. Through attending therapy with her daughter, she got an inside look at what it really was and she began to question and learn. She feels that the time period in which they were first attending therapy with their new diagnosis was a transitional time for the profession and her initial experience was really affected by this. Everyone was working in the best interest of her child, but it felt like they were learning right alongside them. That has really influenced how she works with families now as an SLP. Trying to keep an open mind, provide support wherever she can, and provide information and resources if they are wanting to learn too. Emily really gets it as a parent and SLP. As someone who attended IEPs on the other side of the table long before she became a professional, I wanted her advice on how providers can keep parents as a vital part of the team. She had some great tips!How can providers lead parent-inclusive IEP meetings?•Be mindful of the perspective and language you are using with the parent.•Be compassionate and be empathetic, parents are doing the best they can.•It is the professional's job to build the bridge between home and school or home and therapy.•Not everyone likes to be called mom and dad. Give them their identity, use their name or ask for their preference.•Do not doubt parents when they talk about positive behaviors that are happening at home. •Take that opportunity to learn and build rapport. •Encourage parents to take part in the team, provide videos, write in the daily notebook, etc.•Build rapport and be gentle. Diagnosis is only the beginning for a parent, this is the hardest thing for them to talk about.These are some great things to keep in mind for professionals out there wanting to be sure their parents are included. And for parents, remember these are things you and your family deserve, be sure to advocate for them during IEP meetings. Emily is a dear friend and it was great to hear her perspective on this. You can learn more about her and her practice at The Inspired SLP.#autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside: A unique parent perspective at the IEP table.Tips for professionals on leading a parent inclusive meeting.Tips for parents from diagnosis to advocacy.The parent and professional journey of Emily Estades, The Inspired SLPMentioned In This Episode:www.theinspiredslp.netinspiredslp@gmail.comABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource FREE Masterclass- Best Strategies in 2022 To Reach Your Autistic Students
1/25/202239 minutes, 12 seconds
Episode Artwork

#055: Is ABA Therapy Right For Your Autistic Child? with Rebecca Shellito

Is ABA therapy the right choice for your autistic child? Today Rebecca Shellito, mother, wife, nurse, and non-profit organizer join me to share her family's autism journey. Rebecca’s son Nico received his autism diagnosis shortly before his third birthday and by 4 years old he was in full-time ABA therapy. They were incredibly lucky to find a local provider, covered by insurance that they were comfortable with. I know some clients and friends personally that drive to see their preferred provider outside of their local area. Wherever your provider is, comfortability is key.  Speak up. Ask questions. Don’t stop until you feel comfortable. ABA comes with so many logistics and scientific terms. As a parent, it can feel like a foreign language and be both overwhelming and intimidating. Rebecca took my online course, Help Me Find My Voice, early on in Nico’s ABA journey, and she said it changed the game. The course gave her the confidence to interact with Nico’s therapists and truly understand everything that was happening. No longer did she feel like a sidebar they had to break things down for but more of an active participant in her son’s therapy team. Starting full-time ABA at the age of 4, Nico is now 9 and has seen some real progress. Beginning in a developmental preschool and then regular preschool with an ABA aide, he has now fully moved into a traditional elementary school. Nico is in 3rd grade and participates in general education for half his day and a more restrictive environment in special ed the other half. Rebecca plans to enroll him in some ABA after-school programs and playgroups in the future. No matter how prepared you are, getting the diagnosis of autism for your child can be overwhelming. Rebecca shares some great advice for parents and families just beginning their journey with autism and ABA. You can learn all about the great things she’s doing through her non-profit Uniquely Nico, where she supports parents and autistic children.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Is ABA the right choice for your autistic child?How to find the right provider for ABA therapy?How progress through ABA can transform your child’s life?How the Help Me Find My Voice course can help families.Mentioned In This Episode:Uniquely NicoUniquely Nico on FacebookUniquely Nico on InstagramABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource Best Strategies in 2022 To Reach Your Autistic Students
1/18/202231 minutes, 39 seconds
Episode Artwork

#054: Autism Assessment

Assessments are extremely necessary for understanding the skill set of your learner, setting goals, and making meaningful progress. As a therapist, administering these assessments can be so overwhelming and frustrating, especially when your students have complex needs and are not able to meet the standardized completion. Today, I am sharing my top 5 tips and strategies for autism assessments to make assessments a positive tool in your goal setting for therapy. 1. The Functional Communication Profile - RevisedA readily available, informal but thorough assessment. I love this assessment because it looks at a student's ability to attend to a task, receptive language, expressive language, and social language. The FCPR gives a great baseline for your student's overall speech skills. Most speech therapists have it right in their therapy office, it’s been around for a while and it is available through a variety of distributors. 2. VB-MAPPThe Verbal Behavior Milestones Assessment and Placement Program really streamlined my process for my students who were autistic or had complex communication needs. The information that a VB-MAPP will give you is so necessary for goal setting. It’s broken into three developmental levels, Level 1: 0-18 months, Level 2: 18-30 months, and Level 3: 38-40 months. 3. Informal ScreenersIn my ASHA-approved programs Start Communicating Today and  Help Me Find My Voice, I include informal screeners. These have been put together based on my 20 years in the field and what I find helpful to look at. For students with complex needs, these screeners help take a clear look at foundational skills. Also for older students, these screeners can facilitate questions like what have we tried before and how did that go? This is a great supplement for the road map to progress alongside formal assessments. 4. ObservationObservation makes up a gold standard assessment. Spontaneous communication can be notated just on pen and paper. This can be during structured or unstructured time, preferably both, so you can understand the different modes and attempts for the students' communications in different settings. The most valuable information comes from the questions, what does my student look like as a communicator in these different areas?5. Parent or Team InterviewTalk to the team of teachers working with the student and talk with the parent. Sometimes teachers are the lead on a case and may be sending home forms that include really valuable information. Also, talking to the parents is crucial because it's important to understand where they are coming from and what their concerns may be. Communication with the team will also facilitate understanding progress being made across the students' environment.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Top 5 tips and strategies for an autism assessment.How to get a robust assessment for goal setting. How to build a step-by-step road map for meaningful progress for your learners.Mentioned In This Episode:ABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource 
1/11/202233 minutes, 11 seconds
Episode Artwork

#053: Modified Social and Leisure Skills for Middle and High School Students

If you’ve been listening for any amount of time, you know that I am all about keeping therapy fun and functional. In this episode, I have some great examples of games for your therapy or at home with your child that you can put into practice right away. These games are all about leisure skills. We spend the majority of our lifespan participating in leisure skills so it is so important to work on these skills with our learners. Two of the best assessments for identifying and understanding the needs for leisure skills with your students are the Assessment of Functional Life Skills and the Functional Communication Profile Revised. Both of these have direct sections and questions that pertain directly to leisure skills as life skills and clue you into what your learner needs to work on. Observation is also key. My favorite thing to do is take a look at my students' gym classes and see their communication, leisure, and social skills at work in a less structured setting. When planning for therapy you really have to ask, what skills can we work on in therapy that will help them with their overall engagement, peer interaction, social skills, and most importantly their joy and happiness? Modified leisure skills are so fun to work on and really make a difference beyond therapy and into their shared time with family and for older students when they join the general community. What we do every single day is important. Not just in therapy but also when they go home with their family.  Today I share a few of my favorite modified games for working on leisure skills. I go into how I make them accessible for my students and where to find resources for these games. Many of these games highlight skills like turn-taking, imitation, duration of the task, direction following and so much more. Activities and Games for Leisure Skills:Modified ScrabbleModified UnoDouble UpGrocery Store GameThe Game GalYogaLifting WeightsListening to MusicThese are just some examples of really functional and exciting ways to take on social and leisure skills. I really urge you to take a look at your therapy and the skills you’re working on and ask yourself, why am I working on this? What purpose do the skills and activities you’re currently working on serve? What we are doing every day needs to transcend beyond the classroom and be important across their lifespan!  #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:—What are modified leisure activities? — Why are leisure skills important? — How are your therapy practices transcending the classroom? — How do skills build across the lifespan? — Can therapy be fun and functional? — How can therapy activities be generalized for family time?Mentioned In This Episode:Social skills for students with autism - MODIFIED UNOSocial skills for students with autism - Modified ScrabbleSocial skills for students with autism- The Grocery Store GameSocial skills game for mixed groups - ABA SpeechWord Generator - The Game GalABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource
1/4/202237 minutes, 30 seconds
Episode Artwork

#052: Autism Speech Therapy IEP Goals

As we close out the year, I wanted to highlight my most popular episode. This week, I’m re-sharing Episode 3, where I break down IEPs and discuss everything that goes into creating goals in speech therapy for autistic learners.Setting IEP goals for autistic learners can be incredibly difficult, especially when you’re working with emerging communicators. At the beginning of my career, assessment tools were limited and I found out along the way the goals I set for my students were unclear and hard to measure. Assessment, collaboration, and functional goals are all important pieces of the puzzle for setting up your student and the therapy for success. Standardized tests are commonly used in the classroom, but they are so tricky because they often do not give us the snapshot of skills we need for autistic learners. Assessment tools I recommend if you have access are the VB-MAPP and the Functional Communication Profile. If you don’t yet have access or need to start on a more basic level, I like to look for specific early learner skills. These are those small basic skills that lead to learning bigger skills and tasks. These are measurable communication skills that start in even really young learners such as labeling, verbal imitation, intraverbal skills like filling in the blank, matching, and group listening.  When you have brought all the pieces together, it’s time to set the vision for their communication programming. I have 5 questions for you to ask as a part of my practical and systematic approach to establishing functional goals for your autistic learner. What behavior are we targeting?Is it appropriate for our client?How is this goal specific?Is the goal observable?What does mastery look like?No matter the skill level, the age, or the context of your therapy practice, this approach will help you consider all the important pieces behind each goal. If you’re a parent, this can help you know what questions to ask your therapist and IEP team to ensure the right goals are being observed and measured for your child. As a part of this episode, I have included a downloadable link for my IEP Goal Bank, be sure to check it out as you work with your team and parents to set specific, actionable IEP goals for your autistic learners.#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Strategies for embedding parents’ concerns into their child’s IEP goals.Examples of what a specific, observable goal looks like in the classroom.My recommendation for assessment tools for autistic learners with limited or emerging communication.What skills should we be looking at in our autistic learners?Mentioned In This Episode:IEP Goals for Students with Autism - ABA SpeechWorking with toddlers and preschool aged autistic learners- learn more about our Start Communicating Today Autism CourseWorking with school aged autistic learners- learn more about our autism course- Help Me Find My Voice ABA Speech: HomeABA SPEECH Your Autism Resource
12/28/202128 minutes, 48 seconds
Episode Artwork

#051: Autism in Girls with Robin Roscigno of AUTEACH

Is autism really different in girls and is that affecting reliable diagnosis? I had the opportunity to chat with Robin Roscigno, founder of AuTEACH, former teacher pursuing her PhD, and autistic mother to her autistic daughter. As she speaks from her education background and personal experiences, Robin gives a really great insight on a deeper look into how we are evaluating and educating autistic students. The CDC website reads that autism is 4 times as common in boys as it is in girls. Why are we still saying that? Is it more common in boys or are their crucial elements being missed when it comes to diagnosing females? The thing is autism is not different in girls, it just presents itself differently.When looking at autism in girls, we are talking about internalized experiences vs. externalized behaviors. With girls, a lot of their repetitive thoughts or fixations are happening internally, or they present in somewhat typical female expectations. This could be a little girl playing the exact same scripted play scenario multiple times daily for weeks with no deviation or insensibly organizing and caring for her barbies. At the core, if the behavior is an “expected” or “traditional” female activity within normal gender roles, parents of girls can expect to get push back on an autism diagnosis. Boys and girls are socialized very differently and in fact many of the hallmark signs of autism can be disguised as socialized behavior for women. This makes it easier for girls with autism to hide their symptoms and prevent a reliable diagnosis.Social skills and navigating social situations can be an area where autistic girls are ill-equipped. Robin highlights the typical socialized behaviors of how girls interact with one another and it can be very difficult for girls with autism to operate within that. Her reminder for parents and teachers is to stop assuming children don’t want to socialize. In fact, it can involve a lot of shame and internal pain, especially when the student has a desire to be a part of the group. To combat this, Robin talks about a whole school approach. This means not only talking to students with disabilities but to students without disabilities as well.  It’s not that one group has all the social skills and one none, it’s that they have different skills and they can learn on both sides. It’s an opportunity for double-sided empathy.Robin shared some great suggestions and potential resources for parents of girls with signs of autism. Taking data at home and finding a reputable doctor are some key points for making an evaluation fair and accessible regardless of gender. Advocate for your child and what you as a parent are seeing that raises concerns is so important. You can find out more about Robin and AuTEACH on her TikTok, Instagram, YouTube, and on her website. This was an awesome chat, I hope you got something great out of today’s episode!#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:Characteristics of autism in girls.Guidance for providers working with autistic girls.Advice for parents with female children and autism concerns.Why are girls not receiving autism diagnoses as readily as boys?Is autism different in girls?How to get a fair autism diagnosis for girls.Mentioned In This Episode:AuTeachAuTeach (@auteachofficial) • Instagram photos and videosAutism Education (@auteach) TikTokAuTeach - YouTube
12/21/202138 minutes, 38 seconds
Episode Artwork

#050: 10 Lessons I’ve Learned in 50 Episodes of The Autism Outreach Podcast

Wow, Episode 050! This is amazing. I want to start by saying thank you for listening, this so far has been an incredible experience. 1 year ago, my own kids had a snow day and I had just finished up my podcasting course. I was super nervous but I came into my little walk-in closet and pressed record. Throughout these last 50 episodes, I have learned so much and I want to share with you these important lessons. #1 - Nathan Morgan, Episode 16Nathan taught me that the autism community prefers the term autistic, rather than a person with autism. School for a long time has taught people their first language with all disabilities, but this has really changed and autistic people are letting their voices be heard. It's still important to ask people their preferences, but the majority of the community aligns with that language. #2 - Chris Wenger, Episode 17Chris shared the quote, “How you do anything, is how you do everything”. I had never heard this before but it gave me pause, and really taught me to stop rushing through even the little things, and give my best. #3 - Braxton Baker, Episode 20Braxton uses a framework of 5 Ps for reflection on IEPs. These are Process, Purpose, Possibilities, Progress, Peace. Focusing on the person at hand and these “Ps” is so important, and I am so glad he shared that!#4 - Dr. Mary Barbera, Episode 8Mary shares her personal experience and journey in the autism world beginning with her son’s diagnosis in the 1990s. She has a book, podcast, and some incredible online courses that really help parents be their child’s best advocate and work on so much more than speech. This perspective is so important as a professional, to hear from parents and their stories. She is a great friend and mentor.#5 - Kate Grandbois, 32Kate and I discussed The Communication Bill of Rights. This is an incredible resource located on the ASHA website. This is such a powerful tool that anyone can access and it really reinforces the work we do as professionals.#6 - Crystal Sanford, Episode 39Crystal shares the importance and supports an advocate provides for parents. It was great to learn as a professional what exactly an advocate does because it can be such an area of contention in the IEP room. Since this episode, I have actually signed up to start doing advocacy work and will be offering it very soon as a service through ABA Speech. #7 - Kayla Chalko, Episode 41Kayla is a play-skill expert. In this episode, we discussed play milestones, including pretend to play and at what age that is supposed to happen. One great thing she reminded me of is to take away the need to be perfect. Your lesson or activity does not have to be perfect to be helpful or effective.#8 - My walk-in closet makes the best recording studio! If you want to see where I am recording, be sure to check out the recording of this episode on YouTube.#9 - You can’t do it alone. Not as a professional, not as a parent, not with anything. Special thanks to my business mentor, my amazing assistant, all of my wonderful guests, my social and graphic design helpers, as well as the audio production team who makes my show sound amazing!#10 - There is still so much to share. I have so much planned for the future and episodes that will absolutely blow your mind.This is a wonderful opportunity to hear a variety of perspectives that are truly so important. I have always loved to talk, so this podcast has been perfect for me. I love people, I love being around them, I love helping them. This show is an extension of what I really love to do personally and professionally. Thank you again so much!#speechtherapy #autismWhat’s Inside:How did I get started with this podcast?Lessons I have learned throughout the last 50 episodes.Life lessons for myself.A special thanks to all wh
12/14/202129 minutes, 30 seconds
Episode Artwork

#049: An Introduction To The Early Start Denver Model with Dr. Megan Miller

Dr. Megan Miller is a thought leader in the field of behavior analysis and special education. In this interview, she and I discussed the Early Start Denver Model and its importance to early learners. Play is such a critical piece to communication and this model sets up parents and providers to build joint attention skills. Imitation is such an important skill, many individuals  look to this as a way to learn things and copy skills. However, it is so much more, it is a skill in which communication begins. If we are missing that piece, higher level communication is not going to take place. Where does imitation most naturally occur? Social interaction. Joint attention activities are often child led activities and this is where the most AHA moments occur. If natural social interaction isn't developing, parents often don’t initiate unintentionally, they instead substitute their interactions with “formal” language practice. It’s really critical that parents learn to be silly and have fun engaging in a social or play format. It can sometimes be difficult, and it definitely requires a certain element or attitude, but when you’re really into it the kid responds.Many parents may be intimidated by play based social activity. What is great about the Early Start Denver Model, provides a framework for joint activity routines. The first part is to observe the child to find out what they are interested in. The second is developing the routine, early on this involves imitating the child’s play. The third part is creating variety in the routine, so once you're engaged in an activity the child has started, the adult changes it up. This might mean throwing a ball instead of rolling it, or even just rolling it fast instead of slow. Just small little changes in the play the child is already interested in, which opens up so many opportunities for language and communication for the child to direct the activity. The last part is the closing, preparing to end the activity with a child and move on to the next thing. Whether it's birth-3 or older, professionals and parents alike have to set aside our intentions or vision for the interaction with the kids. Dr. Miller brings up a great point about how aversive it can be if kids are always redirected to play the way the adult wants, because communication really begins with the child’s preference and slowly teaches flexibility. Oftentimes we miss the obscure playful interactions non-neurotypical students may be showing us because we have these ideas of what “fun” should look like, and with that we miss great opportunities for communication with the child. There is so much information online, as well as providers who practice very differently, which can be a good thing but also has some negatives. Parents have certain ideas about structured, table centered activities and can at times not understand the purpose of play based interactions in therapy. Dr. Miller drives home that  research is there for naturalistic communication and that it comes from spontaneous play. The Early Start Denver Model book backs up the need and importance of social activity and this can be used to help parents and even providers understand the need and importance of play. Dr. Miller’s advice is for more people to understand that students who are not neurotypical do not have to communicate the same way as neurotypical individuals. She says, “We are more comfortable, learn better, and are less stressed when we are accepted”.  My wish is that we can all spontaneously communicate in a way that makes sense to us, so I find that so profound! Be sure to check out Dr. Megan Miller and all her work with the Do Better Movement! #autism #speechtherapyWhat's Inside: The Early Start Denver Model. How important the Early Start Denver Model is to early learners.Where imitation mostly occurs.
12/7/202139 minutes, 48 seconds
Episode Artwork

#048: Communication and Independence For Young Autistic Adults with Dr. Lisa Audet

Dr. Lisa Audet is an extremely knowledgeable special education teacher, SLP, and professor at Kent State. In fact, over 20 years ago she was my professor! She specializes in communication and independence for autistic adults, works with these individuals on her campus, and has a unique viewpoint for those of us working with younger adults with autism at the middle and high school level. Because socially and academically the needs are very different from high school to college or work-based settings, it can be hard for parents and professionals to identify the needs of students preparing for transitions. Dr. Audet identifies these needs as learning a sense of self, self-care skills, and understanding their strengths. As therapists, we often focus on students' needs and teach them new skills, but approaching therapy with a strength-based model can help students self-identify and determine jobs and settings that best suit them. Self-monitoring is so important for everyone. For autistic individuals, this can provide success in a variety of ways. This means understanding when they are uncomfortable, when they have a need, or how to understand and repair a relationship or situation when they’ve missed a boundary. Dr. Audet uses the Stop-Think-Make a Plan method for her students to teach them to assess their situation and determine solutions before a problem arises.Older autistic students in high school may be preparing for college or for placement in a work setting. Dr. Audet talks about the ways we can not only set up the student for success but educate employers on the individuals in the work environment. Students should be entering work environments that align with their interests, strengths, and desires, not what “makes sense” to the providers they work with. Alternatively, there is work to be done in the education of employers because many times fear of hurt feelings prevents great learning and developmental opportunities from taking place. As a professor at Kent State, Dr. Audet has a great understanding of what Ohio has to offer its young autistic adults as well as other individuals with other disorders. The Office for Ohioans with Disabilities has a vocational counselor on every state campus. She shares all of the great resources they can provide to students who voluntarily seek their assistance. The Organization for Autism Research has a book that is a great resource for college-bound individuals with autism. There is a lot to be done to support and initiate success for young autistic adults, especially with their varying places on the spectrum. Every state varies on the resources they provide, so be sure to look into all of the resources and options available locally to you! #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:Developing a sense of self within autistic young adults.Self-care and self-advocacy for autistic individuals.The importance of a strength-based therapy model.Self-monitoring for success.Transitioning from an educational environment to a post-secondary environment.Communication in the workplace with autistic adults.Mentioned In This Episode:Working with toddlers and preschool-aged autistic learners - Start Communicating Today Autism CourseWorking with school-aged autistic learners - Help Me Find My Voice ABA Speech: Home
11/30/202138 minutes, 47 seconds
Episode Artwork

#047: Picky Eating with Melanie Potock

One out of four typical children will develop a pediatric feeding disorder. Does that statistic shock you or does it feel extremely relatable? Melanie Potock of Munch Bug is an SLP and Pediatric Feeding Expert. She has written 6 books on feeding, speaks around the world, and is a coach to parents and children struggling with picky eating. Picky eating is a wide, all-encompassing umbrella term that spans many many feeding issues from babies to school-aged kids. A point Melanie really drives home during this interview is that feeding is developmental. Just as you would be concerned if your child was not hitting their other milestones, feeding issues should receive the same concern. So much goes into feeding including cognitive, motor, and even parenting skills.How can you start strong? Can feeding be a joyous experience? Feeding when speaking about food variety and solids begin at 6 months old. This is a really crucial time to learn babies' cues; when are they hungry? When are they done? When are they satisfied? This type of communication between baby and parent is called responsive feeding. A topic in which Melanie has devoted an entire book to!For toddlers and school-aged children who may be showing signs of picky eating are not ruined by good eating habits, remember to shift your mindset. Children grow at an extremely rapid rate from birth to about 18 months when it begins to slow down. A child who may have been eating everything in sight may suddenly not need as much to fuel their body. This is OK. The key at this age is to continuously try new things, in a positive way. What about the age-old trick of sneaking veggies into dessert? Have you ever made avocado pudding or black bean brownies to get that extra nutrition in for your toddler or young child? Melanie’s advice is to take the words trick or sneak out of your vocabulary when it comes to feeding. Did you sneak the black beans in or did you try a fun new recipe? Let kids know what’s in their food and tell them that you are just as surprised as you are that it tastes so yummy. It is okay to experiment with foods and recipes, it's even normal, and that sets the stage for adventurous eating. So what are some characteristics of picky eating that need intervention? Look for rigid patterns such as not tolerating new food on their plate, not eating at the table most of the time, and not eating in a new environment (school, classroom, restaurants). Sometimes kids are being kids, but these are things that happen more frequently than not. You may also see irritability before, during, or after each feeding, taking a long time for feeding, coughing and gagging, more frequently, gurgling, or frequent vomiting. Any stall in the development of feeding warrants intervention.If you are feeling stressed about feeding, get help now. Even if it's just a consult or a few extra tips and slight changes to your existing feeding routine. The longer you wait to get help or make changes, the more unlearning that will need to take place and the chance of extensive feeding therapy in your future. Talk to your pediatrician, reach out to Melanie, or seek out other forms of feeding support.#autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What is picky eating?What are the characteristics of a picky eater?When do you need to get intervention for picky eating?Is feeding developmental?How to make feeding time a joyous experience?Feeding tips for babies, toddlers, and school-aged kids.Mentioned In This Episode:Melanie Potock Melanie Potock on InstagramTalkTools Virtual Conference Feeding First
11/23/202135 minutes, 40 seconds
Episode Artwork

#046: How to Help Autistic Learners with Transitions with Dani LoVecchio

Do you ever walk into a new gym class and feel uneasy or nervous? If you do, you're not unlike many kids who hesitate or resist transitions. Not all children with autism experience difficulty with transitions, but it is something many struggles with. In this interview with Dani LoVecchio from Bridge Kids of New York, we discuss tips and advice for making transitions smoother. Whether it be starting a new school or service, being away from the caregiver for the first time, or smaller transitions throughout your child’s day, there are ways to make it better for the parent, professional, and the child.Dani’s Tips for Smooth Transitions with Autistic Learners:Get prepared - What is the new transition? Start gathering all the information about this new place or activity and share it with your child. Expose them to the new faces and places they will see. Set positive expectations for the new transition. Utilize a visual schedule - A visual schedule can be different for every child. Some might just need a written schedule somewhere they can see. Others might need pictures or photos and a more detailed and personal schedule. Keep a comfort Item - Is there a stuffed animal, special picture, blanket, or toy that brings your child comfort? It is okay and even beneficial to let them bring this item into their new space.Practice time away - Time away can be scary for any parent, let alone a parent of a child with a disability. However, it is so important to prepare for separation that will take place during services and school by utilizing a well trusted and trained babysitter. Skip gradual introductions - Many centers and schools offer a slow or gradual introduction instead of jumping into 5 days a week. This can often create more stress and unknowns around the new transition and even take longer for the child to adapt. Go right to the full schedule to set a strong foundation.Routines and schedules are great for kids, especially kids with autism. They teach the learner what to expect and to trust what will be next. However, we all know there is no such thing as perfect and life happens. As the child gets older, be sure to prepare them for flexibility and what to do when a schedule change or a transition isn’t the same. Dani and I also touched on communication between providers and parents. This is always so important but even more so when working on new transitions. Be sure to have a clear communication plan in place so as the parent or professional, you’re on the same page and continuing support.Transitions are part of every single person's day. They aren't always big scary new ones, but they can feel that way to some autistic learners. I loved getting to talk to Dani today and hope you can put some of her great advice to use! #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What are transitions and what do they look like for autistic learners? Tips for easing transitions, big and small.Can you keep routines and still be flexible?Determining a communication system between parents and providers.Mentioned In This Episode:ABA Speech: HomeBridge Kids of New YorkBridge Kids NY on Instagram (@bridgekidsny) Bridge Kids NY on Facebook
11/16/202133 minutes, 26 seconds
Episode Artwork

#045: Executive Functioning with Sara Ward

Whether you're working with a young child, teen, or adult, executive functioning skills are among the most critical and practical skills we need. In this interview with Sara Ward, an SLP specializing in executive function, she shares the unique background that makes this work so special to her, as well as some really interesting approaches to assessment and intervention.Many people have different explanations for executive functioning. Sara defines executive functioning for young children in the most basic form, sequencing. As you reach middle and high school, you’re continuing to plan with a window of time and space that is continuously growing. It’s very easy for parents and professionals to be a child’s “prosthetic frontal lobe”, we visualize the students through space and time and we at times over prompt. So in a neurotypical brain, this is the ability to visualize where you are in a future time or space.  90% of the time, task planning happens in a different place from where you execute the plan. Naturally, as you might plan your day and anticipate the tasks necessary to accomplish your daily routine, you may use gestures to prompt your steps. An intervention Sara uses that is really successful in young children is teaching them to gesture. So a child with really great executive functioning skills would use very specific verbs to describe the steps necessary for their future plans. With a child who is lacking in executive function, you might prompt them to show you with their hands. Oftentimes, when students are able to feel the steps with their hands, the attached verb comes. So there is this language and movement attached with task execution.How do you determine the need for executive functioning? Assessments are tricky because SLP’s are not licensed to administer tests related to neuro-capability. Evaluators tend to look at Executive Skills through observation and rating scales. Sara recommends the Barkley Attention Deficit Executive Function Scale, because of the way it differentiates between attention deficits in comparison to executive skills in the individual. CEFI, Clinical Executive Function Inventory, is an online tool that Sara suggests to accurately characterize kids' behaviors related to executive functioning. She also mentions several other tests and scales that can be used, in addition to looking at existing speech and language assessments with an executive functioning lens.Sara provides so many great suggestions and tools for working with students on executive functioning and the program she developed. As an experienced SLP, I myself found this information so enlightening. I cannot wait to take these tools to my next IEP meeting and to my therapy. I hope you found this just as helpful.#autism #speechtherapy  What’s Inside:What is executive functioning?Why are executive function skills important?Assessment and intervention for executive function skills.Executive functioning in young children, teens, and adults. Mentioned In This Episode:ABA Speech: HomeCognitive Connections: Executive Function
11/9/202143 minutes, 38 seconds
Episode Artwork

#044.2: How To Help Students With Apraxia of Speech with Dr. Edythe Strand Part 2

Welcome back to part 2 of my interview with Dr. Edythe Strand. If you haven’t listened to part 1, be sure to go back and listen to get the full scoop. Edythe is a very important leader in her field. In addition to the Dynamic Assessment, she also researched and developed a critical treatment for children with severe apraxia, Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing. DTTC, as it is known, is an innovative treatment in which a hierarchy of cues is used to demonstrate and initiate motor-speech skills in children with apraxia. In most therapies, we are constantly taking data, every meeting or every session. However, the Dynamic Assessment and DTTC is such an involved, hands-on, and therapist-led treatment data and scoring doesn’t need to take place at every visit. In Edythe’s work at Mayo, they would take data every 3 visits using multidimensional scoring. She notes that the importance of data is not as prevalent during an intensive treatment like this as opposed to when she is doing research. When working on something as important to communication as language, whether the child is typical or has autism, the type of language, the number of words, and the words that are chosen to work on are so important. Especially in the cases of students with severe apraxia and autism, functional and fundamental words during practice and DTTC are crucial.In this episode, Dr. Edythe Strand touches on the commonalities between apraxia and other diagnoses and disorders such as autism. She explains all of the research, practice, and genuine desire to help kids with severe apraxia that has gone into her work. She is such a wealth of information and has provided so many great links and references for this episode, so be sure to check them out!What’s Inside:What is DTTC Treatment?Taking data with DTTC and Dynamic Assessment.Choosing important words for treatment.Is there a connection between Apraxia and Autism?  Mentioned In This Episode:ABA Speech: HomeChild Apraxia TreatmentApraxia-kids: HomeVideos for Parents and Clinicians:Overview of possible causes and types of problems in speech developmentDefinitions and Descriptions of Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS)Examples of different levels of severity in Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS)Differentiating Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) from other types of speech sound disordersDiagnosis of Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) Treatment of Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS)How parents can help their child with Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS)Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS): Other resourcesChildhood Apraxia of Speech:  Information for Parents5-hour general course on CAS or the Once Upon a Time Foundation, through the University of Texas, Dallas.Childhood Apraxia of Speech -- by Dr. Edythe Strand, Ph.d. View video FOR FREE and receive ASHA CEUs! www.utdallas.edu/calliercenter/events/CAS/ 
11/2/202130 minutes, 36 seconds
Episode Artwork

#044.1: How To Help Students With Apraxia of Speech with Dr. Edythe Strand - Part 1

Welcome to part one of my interview with Dr. Edythe Strand. Edythe was a professor at Mayo College, former head of Division of Speech Pathology, Department of Neurology at the Mayo Clinic, and a practicing Speech Pathologist and clinician. Her research has focused on developmental, acquired, and progressive Apraxia speech.What are the characteristics of Apraxia? Edythe noted that Apraxia is not a medical diagnosis but rather a label for a speech sound disorder. Different from other speech disorders, Apraxia affects the movement needed to make a sound. Characteristics might include, difficulty programming and planning, movement gestures, awkward movement through a movement transition, mistiming, blending of manner, distorted sounds, intrusive schwa, inconsistency in the context of repeated production. Therapy for students with Apraxia looks a lot different than other language disorders. Speech-Language Pathologists typically go straight for phonemes and articulation. However, Edythe further drives home that Apraxia treatment is focused on movement. So instead of enunciating letter sounds and syllables, the clinician is going to emphasize the movement that creates the sound. This is called Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing, or DTTC, treatment. Dynamic Assessments are the best evaluations for students with Apraxia and are really different from a lot of the typical assessments in speech pathology. It involves a hierarchy of cueing, and scoring is based on response to that cueing. Versus in Static Assessment, typically there is a picture or a question; the child responds once and the clinician notes the response. Edythe Strand developed her own Dynamic Assessment, DEMS  (Dynamic Evaluation of Motor-speech Skill). She shares some examples of who and how this assessment would be used. The benefits of Dynamic Assessment include knowledge of a child's preferred cueing and an understanding of the severity of the disorder. Be sure to check out the amazing resources from Dr. Edythe Strand and stay tuned for part two of this really interesting interview!#autism #speechtherapyWhat’s Inside:The characteristics of Apraxia.What is Dynamic Assessment?How to approach therapy with students who have Apraxia?What is DTTC treatment? Mentioned In This Episode:Child Apraxia TreatmentApraxia-kids: Home Videos for Parents and Clinicians:Overview of possible causes and types of problems in speech developmentDefinitions and Descriptions of Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS)Examples of different levels of severity in Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS)Differentiating Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) from other types of speech sound disordersDiagnosis of Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) Treatment of Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) How parents can help their child with Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS)Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS): Other resourcesChildhood Apraxia of Speech:  Information for Parents5-hour general course on CASChildhood Apraxia of Speech -- by Dr. Edythe Strand, Ph.d. View video FOR FREE and receive ASHA CEUs! www.utdallas.edu/calliercenter/events/CAS
10/26/202127 minutes, 23 seconds
Episode Artwork

#043: From Nonspeaking to Professional Speaker - Dr. Kerry Magro’s Autism Communication Journey

In this interview, Dr. Kerry Magro, one of the first speakers who is also autistic,  shares his communication journey.  Kerry was non-speaking at 2.5 and received an official autism diagnosis at 4. Despite not speaking in full sentences until 7 and facing a variety of sensory challenges, the support of his loving family and over 15 years of a multitude of therapies helped him overcome many of his barriers. All of these paved the way for his achievement in a degree in sports management before he realized his true passion for disability advocacy and received his Ph.D.  We discuss how, with the right support in place, anyone can find their voice.Kerry describes his early speech behavior as non-speaking versus non-verbal because of the sounds he was making. While they weren’t words, these sounds turned into pronunciations and through speech therapy broke ground to start communicating, in any way possible. I work with a lot of students who are not yet spontaneously communicating, and it is always my focus to create budding communication. Kerry describes the two biggest things that helped him grow from non-speaking to a professional speaker were speech therapy and music therapy. When you receive a diagnosis of autism for your child, sharing this information with them can seem scary or overwhelming, especially when a child is young. Kerry shares how his parents told him after a fun game at school where the teacher told him he was special and wanted to know why. His parents told him that he has autism and that it meant he learned differently, but that he was no less of a person than others. While that may seem simple, Kerry says it was life-changing for him as he grew older and began to understand his disability, sit in on IEP meetings, and become an advocate for himself. Leaving the support of the elementary, middle, and high school and moving on to college is quite a transition, whether you’re a typical learner or not. Kerry says for him, the best support for him as he entered college was understanding his accommodations, understanding his needs to succeed academically. For him specifically, he needed more time on tests, a private room due to sensory needs, and a note taker due to his dysgraphia.  He is actually working on a book about the transition from high school to college with advice and experience from many autistic voices.As a professional in this field, my goal is always to support my students, but sometimes it can be hard to know what language is preferred. Kerry talks about the importance of letting neurodivergent individuals and self-advocates identify themselves. It’s really not up to a professional to dictate the preferred language of someone else. Many are taught to use the label, a person with autism, but Kerry prefers the language, autistic individual.  He also stresses that parents and professionals should stop using functioning labels. The best way to describe your child is to list their strengths and weaknesses. Autism is such a wide spectrum, so person-centered approaches are essential to the autism community. If you’ve met one autistic individual, you’ve met one.Be on the lookout for Kerry’s contribution to the book Life After the Lockdown: Resetting Perceptions on Autism, just released this September. This fall, he is gearing up for many speeches for National Bullying Prevention Month and National Disability Employment Awareness Month, as well as the spring release of his book Autistics on Autism for World Autism Month, in which 100% of the proceeds will go into his scholarship fund. #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:Dr. Kerry Magro’s communication journey.The importance of speech and music therapy.Non-speaking to professional speaker.Telling your child their diagnosis. Autism and transitioning to college.Understanding preferred language and labels.
10/19/202127 minutes, 1 second
Episode Artwork

#042: How to Have Effective Communication With Parents

How are you utilizing effective communication with parents? Parents, how are you effectively communicating with the educators in your child's life? Ria Reive from HiMama is a former early childhood educator. She shares actionable tips to improve communication with parents and teachers. As well as the overall benefit from effective communication in a school setting. You may not see how impactful parent engagement can be in the day-to-day, but down the road, there is going to be an immense benefit when both the parent and the educator have the knowledge on both sides.What are Ria’s three big strategies for effective parent communication? It all starts with being yourself because you are starting the map of engagement from the get-go.Continue to be a source of knowledge for the parent. Be that stepping stone when a parent is ready for help, they may not be accepted right away, but if you continue to be that source, you may be surprised by what they are taking in. Seek professional development on communicating with parents, take the time to invest in yourself, and you will find those interactions and engagement are a lot more successful.So what kind of daily information are you providing parents on a day-to-day basis? For Ria in the classroom working with younger kids, that's going to be feeding, naps, diaper changes, etc., and then kind of how their day went, did it go amazing, or maybe they had a rough day and some of that daily info can clue in on that. So when she was in the classroom, that was translated via paper. However, we talk a lot about how parents do not need one more piece of paper, and that's where HiMama comes in. HiMama provides a digital piece of communication for efficient, direct, dissemination of information between teachers and parents.What happens when there may be a problem or disagreement? Ria and I talk about the benefits of creating an action plan. Decide how you’re going to handle problems with parents and remain professional and supportive. Remember, there is a time and place,  during drop-off at the classroom door, probably isn't it. It takes a team to educate and support students with autism, and all students. Parent engagement and communication from both sides is a skill really integral to the success of the child at hand.#autism #speechtherapyWhat's Inside:The importance of effective communication with parents and teachers.Actionable tips for educators to improve communication.What kind of information should be communicated between parents and teachers?How to handle tough conversations.What is HiMama and how could it help your education communication?Mentioned In This Episode:HiMama - The Best Childcare App for Daycare CentersABA Speech: Home 
10/12/202131 minutes, 51 seconds
Episode Artwork

#041: What Play Skills Should My Child Have and How Can I Help Them?

Have you ever wondered about how your child should be playing? Today Kayla Chalko,  SLP from Walkie Talkie, talks with me today about the importance of play for learning. We talk all about play milestones and the importance of parent-to-child connection in building up to those. What are the benefits of play? The amount of time that someone could spend doing formal instruction, versus the time spent playing while introducing content, much more information will stick. Shared activities with an adult and child or multiple children also bring impactful connections and social skills.Parents can get nervous when hearing the word milestones, especially if they find their child isn't measuring up. Milestones are a guideline and a point on which to work from. So what are some basic play milestones?6 months - 12 months: Engaging in social games such as peek-a-boo or patty cake, usually paired with words and songs. Silly games involving back and forth and imitation. 18 months: Using tools to pretend actions like hammering, pouring and mixing. Playing with sensory items. Developing their imagination with more pretend play, they may pretend to feed dolls or mom. 2 years: Continuing pretend play. They may imitate normal activities from their home. They may play house, clean up, and imitate the caregivers. At this brainstage, they are ready to pretend based on their environment. Beginning to try joint play with other kids. Change your mindset from working specifically on milestones to genuine connection. Play can be an intimidating word for parents, but make it all about connection. What makes you and your kid feel silly? Start with something like that, loosen up and feel silly. Mindset is the most important piece; this is how you create connection with the child, and that's where those play skills will come through.Therapy should be fun for the child and for the clinician. Creating an atmosphere  that is fun and functional is important. A lot of therapists are eager for a list of toys for their therapy room. Kayla’s go-to toys are her balloon pump, a ball, markers, puppet books, and bubbles. However, she says regardless of toys, it is all about the mindset and connection. Sometimes your best toys are your hands, voice, and facial expressions. It doesn't matter what you’re playing with; it's how you're playing with it.Kayla’s closing advice is to get rid of the pressure and perfection. Stop worrying about milestones and connections. She says that if parents can focus purely on connection with their child for just a week, she guarantees that they will improve and learn so much more over the course of that time!#autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:A breakdown of play skill milestones.What does play look like for children 6 months to 2 years of age?How parents and providers can support play skills.Mentioned In This Episode:Walkie Talkie Speech Therapy | Speech Therapy in San Diego
10/5/202130 minutes, 53 seconds
Episode Artwork

#040: How Can I Help My Child with Expressive Language Delay?

Ineffective communication in all humans, will affect how we behave. Children who cannot communicate, do not have the life experience to handle their feelings and situations and that presents in their behavior. Ashley Scott, SLP-BCBA, shares in this episode the ongoing and intentional processes of building expressive language in children. There is a difference between having vocabulary and functional language skills. A child may be able to count, say their ABCs, or identify color, but they may not be able to communicate. So they may know the color orange, but if they want an orange, can they say “mommy I want an orange”. Functional language is not just talking but using words to request, negotiate, and communicate with their parents and peers. It is not cut and dry, “a kid can talk so they start talking”. If you are working on getting a child to talk, there are so many things that need to be in place, so it is important to have less focus on words and more focus on foundational skills as simple as learning to sit. Ashley’s advice for parents is to ask fewer questions. Narrating is a key to building language skills and understanding the meaning behind words. Ask less questions and comment and narrate everything as you and your child are doing it. Pair everything you’re doing with real words, to build connections between the activity or item and the word. We want to expose kids to a rich vocabulary, but when kids aren't communicating, keep words simple. They don’t have to be long sentences, but instead small phrases and keywords. For example, you don’t need to say “you’re putting on your shoes” instead hold and point to the shoes and say “shoes on” or you don’t need to say “let’s open the door now” instead say “open” but say it a few times, clear and exaggerated.One of Ashley’s big questions for therapists and parents is, “how much are you facilitating?” Wait time is a big piece. It is critical to give children time to process and respond. One thing Ashley said that makes so much sense is working on language is an art form, a unique balance between foundational skills, modeling, narrating, and allowing silent time for processing language. Another key part of therapy is that the skills a child can perform in therapy should be able to be performed, across all of their environments  and with all people they interact with. It's important to create opportunities for communication. This differentiates the difference between can’t do or won’t do. Reinforcement is critical, modeling what it looks like to respond to a request. Repeating a request over and over is not effective. Say it one time, and if they do not comply, physically complete the request with them. For example, you don't need to say come here over and over. If they do not come the first time, show them what coming here looks like. Building expressive language is about building independence. There are so many teaching opportunities that are missed because as adults we meet the child’s needs that they can do themselves and we do not give them the opportunity to ask for help or demonstrate their knowledge. The biggest takeaway for parents and professionals here is language and communication is more than just talking. #autism #speechtherapy What's Inside:Getting started with expressive language delays.Real tips and strategies for parents and professionals.The art form of building expressive language.Building language happens in more than just the therapy room. Mentioned In This Episode: FREE live webinar- Autism Therapy Strategies for Toddlers and
9/28/202137 minutes, 58 seconds
Episode Artwork

#039: Autism and Supporting Parents- A Talk with Crystal Sanford

Crystal Sanford is an SLP,  Autism Mom, and owner of Sanford Autism consulting. She is sharing her professional and parental journey. Crystal’s focus is on IEP advocacy and parent support.It's really integral to include parents as part of the team. The whole process can feel daunting for parents. To begin with, parents can feel isolated in dealing, and navigating the special ed process can make it especially hard. Therapists can feel defensive and nervous, but parents can be really overwhelmed and advocates play such an important role. IEPs are really a different language for parents. Advocates go in as a liaison and support person to bridge the gap between school and parent. They will ask some of the parents’ concerns, discuss goals, and make sure the parents’ voice is heard.One thing about the pandemic was the creation of Zoom IEP conferences. I don’t think we’ll ever go back to 20 sweaty people sitting around a room. The addition of Zoom conferences has allowed the setting to be more flexible and collaborative. In the past, it's been very “us against them” in some cases, now we’re all together and we're focusing on the success of the child. Parents should always trust their gut and ask questions. For parents that are new to the process, think about your child and what works well for them. Use that information. If things are coming up that you’re not sure about, ask those questions. Be persistent in what you want for your kids, but also be a listener. The law requires special education staff and therapists to provide what is appropriate for your child, not what's best. Crystal works with parents on understanding the difference, and how to find balance. It is so important for parents, therapists, and other professionals that are involved in the IEP or service process to remember that the key focus is the child. Parents really are the expert on their child. Crystal’s tip to convey this is to develop a “Parent Input Statement”. Every year they should draft a statement to include who their child is, their diagnosis, what works well at home, focus points for the school year, and the best way to contact them. As the child gets older, include them in that process as a segue to self-advocacy.It is okay to think out-of-the-box for kids. It’s important for therapists to advocate why they are teaching things and how they are working for them. Oftentimes, skills and therapy gets generalized; it's necessary to get therapy into real situations, especially in older grades in middle and high school when you're working on big life skills. Crystal has such a great perspective on therapy and parent involvement as a professional and parent. I hope that by listening to this episode, you’ve found some tips to put into action in your next IEP meeting or therapy session, whether you’re the parent or the provider! If you have any questions, please reach out to me and be sure to  sign up for my free webinar, Autism Strategies for Toddlers and Preschool Aged Students. #autism #speechtherapy What’s Inside:What is the purpose of parent advocacy?The IEP process, and how it’s changed through the pandemic.Parents as the experts on their children.Teaching self-advocacy in children.Out-of-the-box therapy. Mentioned In This Episode:Register for my new FREE live webinar- Autism Therapy Strategies for Toddlers and Preschool Aged Students 
9/21/202138 minutes, 27 seconds
Episode Artwork

#038: How to Help Toddlers and Preschool Aged Students with Autism Communicate

Knowledge is power. When you know more, you’re going to understand more. If you are listening in real-time, my brand new toddler course launches this week! I have created the course, Start Communicating Today, for parents and professionals to help their toddlers and preschool-aged students with Autism communicate. This ASHA-certified course, from the set-up to the material, is parent-friendly. With Covid, there are a lot of families on waitlists or who aren't able to get the service level they need because of safety concerns. This is a great course for anyone with a child with Autism, a struggling communicator, and even those waiting for a diagnosis. By signing up, you gain access to the course AND access to a private Facebook group full of members of both this toddler course and my school-aged course. This page is a place of community, dialogue, and feedback. Start Communicating Today is a 5-hour course broken up into 7 Modules. This course is full of great information you can actually use in your everyday therapy practices. I was very systematic in the creation of this course. You will see these modules build upon each other in a flow of importance.  Every single module comes with a printable, to reference as a resource in everyday therapy. I created this course to answer the question; what do we work on with students who are early learners and not communicating on their own? These modules provide detailed information, resources, examples, and even video tutorials on implementing these best practice tools. The Seven Modules:Assessments: The “Gold Standard” Assessments, what assessments do I find helpful,  and all of the points that make up a good assessment.Goal development: How to set goals that drive the success of intervention for toddler-age students.Foundational Skills of Communication: Expressive Language, Communication, Play, and Joint Attention.Materials: The language developing materials I use with preschool and toddler-aged students.Group skills: How to frame group therapy and resources and ideas for planning.Training: Creating a cohesive team for parents, paraprofessionals, and therapists.Data Collection: How to capture and use data while maintaining engagement. I have been able to connect with amazing parents and therapists who have taken my courses through the Facebook group. I am so excited to be able to share this information with you. Please reach out to me if you have any questions, and be sure to  sign up for my free webinar, Autism Strategies for Toddlers and Preschool Aged Students. What’s Inside:My new course for toddlers with Autism; Start Communicating Today.The seven modules of my new course.How to work with toddler and preschool aged students.How to help early learners with struggling communication. Mentioned In This Episode: Free Webinar - Autism Strategies for Toddlers and Preschool Aged Students 
9/14/202125 minutes, 50 seconds
Episode Artwork

#037: Language Development Milestones - A Chat with Allison Fors

Allison Fors is an SLP, blogger, and product creator. She has worked in both a school and private setting and is now a stay-at-home mom focusing on her resource creation. Today we’re discussing the big word in the development world; milestones. What does that even mean? A milestone is a skill that 90% of children are doing at that age. The problem is, we often treat milestones as averages when an average is about what 50% of children are doing and that is where you see a bigger gap.When looking at milestones, it's important to understand the difference between expressive and receptive. Expressive is how the child communicates, whether verbally with words or through signs and gestures. Receptive is what the child understands. Children will typically have a higher receptive communication. If you have a pre-verbal child, determine how they are expressing physically and the amount they can show they understand. It’s not just about the milestones, you have to look at the whole child. Figure out what their speech looks like, physical development; you really need the big picture. Allison, as a product creator, has developed easy-to-read graphics for the milestones and all of the areas that Speech-Language Pathologists cover. It has such a broad scope of practice and this can be helpful for determining what SLPs can help with and how. Allison has also created a grammar resource for older children where there isn't a lot of guidance in the SLP world.The more charts there are for guidance to help parents and professionals, the better. Looking at milestones, If you have concerns, do not wait. Get your child assessed by a pediatrician or in a clinic. If you’re on a waitlist like so many families, there are always options out there if you're able to pay for private care. There are also online options. Allison's advice for professionals to look at the whole child. Do not get sucked into these developmental marks. There are so many pieces of the puzzle that could really change the direction of therapy or the level of concern. Her advice for parents is don’t wait, time is precious and it is better to be safe than sorry when talking about the development of your child. I am coming out with a toddler course that you can find on my website. It’s going to be great information for parents and professionals. In this episode, I share some important information that will be included. Be sure to get on the waitlist!What's Inside:What are milestones for speech and language?How to analyze the milestones, whether you’re a parent or professional. How to look at the whole child to understand the whole scope.Mentioned In This Episode:ABA Speech - Join the Waitlist!
9/7/202130 minutes, 48 seconds
Episode Artwork

#036: Supporting Parents and Early Intervention with Jaclynn Bosley

Jaclynn Bosley is a great friend and colleague who I have worked with across many different settings over the years. She is the owner and operator of Thrive Early Learning Center. We discuss the importance of family involvement, some ideas for parents as they’re seeking the support of ABA therapy, and what early intervention looks like in Jaclynn’s center. Getting a new diagnosis can be overwhelming for parents. Jaclyn reminds parents to take a deep breath and go to the expert and have them provide you with the road map of where to go next.  Also, steer clear of Facebook groups and internet forums, it can often be a scary place if you don’t have the right questions or all the information. Trust your gut with your providers and do your research on the program that's right for your family.We discuss some things to look for and think about when looking for and starting therapy.Indicators of a good program:Transparency.Parental involvement.Children’s positive nonverbal cues.Human connection and relationship with the provider.Funding sources for therapy:State-specific scholarship programs for children with Autism or other disabilities.Health Insurance. This is typically only for early intervention and can come with stipulations of reduced hours or a cap on hours as your child gets older.Beginning at 3, what services are your public schools required to offer?For the Thrive Early Learning Center, Jacylnn starts with the initial intake. This will be in a scheduled block of time when no other students are in the building so that the child can have a full roam of the space. Parents and the clinical director will be present to observe and take down lots of anecdotal information. Assessments will take place once a child starts. At Thrive, they use  ABLES or VB-MAPP. ABLES is great for students with more communication needs. VB-MAPP works for students with more language skills.For group therapy at Thrive, it is typically a small group of 3-5 kids. One person is giving instruction as the students are participating, other therapists will come over and quietly prompt and redirect individuals if they get off task. One-on-one support can be a barrier layer because the therapist becomes the interpreter. Teaching students to cue into their environment by looking around to see what their peers are doing. Fading out prompts. They practice watching and listening to a leader during circle or story time. Then allow for shared activity during literacy centers, craft time, and gross motor play.Jaclynn’s advice is that navigating therapy is a marathon, not a sprint, you don't have to be perfect coming out of the gate. Give yourself the grace to change and adapt. There is always time to make progress. When you first get a diagnosis, put yourself on narration mode, to keep your child immersed in the language, talk to your kids like you would even if they don't have a disability, and watch the journey unfold! You’ll get there together with your providers, and it will keep that journey happy!What’s Inside:Parent involvement in therapy.Indicators of a good provider.What therapy looks like at Thrive Early Learning Center.Jaclynn’s advice for parents with a new diagnosis.
8/31/202140 minutes, 17 seconds
Episode Artwork

#035: Play and Social Skills for Young Autistic Students

As we prepare to go back to the classroom for face-to-face education, I think it's important to talk about play and social skills for our younger students. Unstructured play time can be something students with Autism or other complex communication issues really struggle with.Often these students do not independently engage so it's important to ask, “What can I do to help these kids engage?” As a therapist, my goal is to facilitate peer-to-peer interaction and encourage shared activity. One of the ways I do this is by implementing modified games at the end of group therapy. These games look very different from their original counterparts. This is because they are more accessible for students with Autism and other complex communication issues by eliminating the need for strategy and putting the emphasis on a shared group experience.Modified GamesMusical ChairsAs opposed to traditional musical chairs, I never take a chair away. I give the directions, “when you hear the music you walk when it stops you sit down”. This is fun because the students are moving and you can use popular music or themed music. All you need is a device to play music like your cell phone, chairs, and the students.MemoryCards of all different types to play this game are usually readily available. This game can typically take an hour or more, so to cut time and make it more accessible, I remove the majority of matches. I go through and pick the matches, and put one part of the matches in a pile face down, and then line up the other part of the matches face up. This way they can see all the pictures. They take turns picking a card and finding the match. What’s great about this is that it is a game that they can definitely play at home with their parents or family too!Simon Says I modify this game by ALWAYS saying “Simon says”. Essentially I am the leader (Simon) and I am giving directions and demonstrating and they are following directions by imitating. This is not only great practice for leisure skills but also imitation. GoNoodleThis is a free website with amazing dances and brain breaks. If you have a smart board, you can let students go up and pick the video. All the dances have motions to imitate and cooperate with the group, they are so fun and interactive that you’ll want to move along too!The Grocery Store GameI've been playing this game for 20 years, it is super fun. You write different letters of the alphabet down. The sentence starter for this game is “I bought…”. Go around the room and start with the letter and have students say what they bought with the corresponding letter, i.e. “I bought apples...I bought bananas...etc.” I have even created a resource with visuals to help students who are having difficulty recalling a word. A great thing about this is that it is also accessible to students using AAC devices. There are a lot of things you can work on as a therapist in group settings: Greetings, engaging in the group, student engaging in a variety of tasks, expanding leisure repertoire, joining others in play, and sustained social time. All of these are accessible for students who are yet verbally communicating, up to students who are fully conversational. I put these resources together to provide real tips and strategies to put to use to increase communication in play and social skills across all environments. I really want you to feel comfortable and ready to get to work helping your students and children. There is so much communication involved in interaction and fun that should be explored!What's Inside:Play and Social skills for students with autism and other complex communication issues.Tips for returning to face-to-face school post-pandemic.Providing all-day communication, practicing individually and with peers.Facilitating peer
8/24/202133 minutes, 46 seconds
Episode Artwork

#034: SLP and BCBA Collaboration with Eleyonzettah Bonilla

Dual certified SLP-BCBAs are rare in our therapist community, so many providers find it very difficult when collaborating with other professionals who overlap the scope of care. I am discussing a great professional article that tackles this hot topic with my former supervisee and fellow SLP and BCBA, Eleyonzettah E. Bonilla. The article, Interprofessional Collaborative Practice Between Behavior Analysts, and Speech-Language Pathologists, is available on ABAI.For many SLPs or BCABs, it is difficult to see when other people are doing what you are trained to do. It can often feel like you're being encroached on. This is bound to happen when many times the care requires an overlap. Eleyonzettah and I talk about how crucial it is to embrace this overlap. The article actually discusses the importance of highlighting the strengths of the different providers. When working with two providers who have knowledge about multiple different points of care, you have an advantage.Training can be a great aspect of collaboration. When working with other providers, you can facilitate role extension and role release. While you may not ask another provider to teach a skill from scratch, you can release an extension of practicing a skill by training the other provider on what you need from the learner. We do not own these skills, the skills are there as points for teaching. When facilitating a collaborative relationship, professionalism is key. Eleyonzettah and I both relate to having poor encounters with other professionals. We feel that many other SLP or BCBAs also encounter other professionals they do not care for, this does not mean every encounter has to be negative. It is important to keep language and communication clear and productive. When you're speaking with another provider during collaborative work, the patient should be first. You are a team with the goal of helping the learner.Discussing this secret problem in the ABA community, Eleyonzettah and I kept coming back to a common theme. The child, learner, or patient comes first! Our job is to facilitate learning and quality of life for our learners and collaborating with other professionals can sometimes be the only way to do that!I enjoyed this discussion with Elenyonzettah greatly and it is my hope that you found some tips or beneficial information in today’s episode that you can put into practice right away!What's Inside:SLP and BCBA Collaboration.How to work with people from different fields and expertise.Translating research into everyday practice.Putting the child or learner at the forefront of the work.
8/17/202130 minutes, 56 seconds
Episode Artwork

#033: AAC and Autism with Anne Page

We should inspire and not require students when on our journey to beginning communication. Anne Page emphasizes this as she joins me today to discuss her role as an Assistive Technology Lead and the importance of how we use AAC with our students. Alternative Augmentative Communication (AAC) is a tool that can be used for students with varying needs and  accesses. We discuss the wide variety of applications on the market for use as AAC. Anne gives us some points of thought for parents and professionals as they are choosing AAC for their students.  What are the individual's needs? How is the individual able to access the app? What is the history and future of the development of the app? Will the app sustain rich language for the long-term use of the individual?In addition to applications, we discuss the physical device used by our students. There are many AAC apps specifically designed for use with an iPad. However, there are still dedicated devices in use out there. The type of device is really important when considering the access point of the child and the insurance coverage of the device. As iPads are becoming more common as AAC, Anne has noted that some apps with heavy-duty iPad cases are now being approved via insurance. It doesn’t have to all be high tech. There are many low tech options out there that can be used in addition to devices. These can be great to overcome the barriers AAC can have such as use in an outdoor or pool environment, a problem with the device’s battery, and so on. Anne tells us about the Core Board she created that is available free on her website!When beginning AAC, start with preferred activities. Use AAC with things that bring your students joy. Once students are successful using their device and applications, then teaching using non-preferred activities can start. AAC should help our students find their voice because communication is a human right. Anne highlights throughout this episode that this should be a positive experience that inspires our students. I hope you found this show informative and can put these ideas and strategies to use with the AAC users in your life!What's Inside:What is an Assistive Technology Lead?What AAC apps are available and how to choose one.How to help every single student find their voice.Inspiring not requiring students.
8/10/202138 minutes, 19 seconds
Episode Artwork

#032: AAC and Evidenced Based Practice with Kate Grandbois

AAC is a special space that crosses over through many shared professional settings. Kate Granbois joins us on the episode today to talk about her job as an AAC specialist, the ins and outs of  Augmentative Alternative Communication, and getting comfortable with the process. Kate warns about her title of “AAC Specialist”, while it's a real job and title, and she holds a lot of knowledge on this topic, it's important for many other professionals in the AAC user’s life to be empowered in this skill set as well.The most important part of AAC is the user. The Communication Bill of Rights is a great resource and really highlights the fact that communication is a human right. So when collaborating, it's important to recognize that no one owns just one environment. The AAC user needs to be supported across all environments to remove barriers. Taking the AAC user's family and friends values into consideration is a critical and ethical piece that is crucial to the success of the user across their life. AAC is not just important for accessing curriculum in the school. There are social aspects and basic need aspects, and the environment needs to revolve around the whole user, not just the professional's therapy room.AAC is more than just communication, it is also knowledge on equipment, vendors, the law, and documentation. Kate gives us some broad steps for getting started with AAC assessment.Familiarize yourself with the Communication Bill of Rights and assessment frameworks.What does it take to “sit in the seat”, to do the assessment?Know the products and features and understand the feature matching process.Know and understand the documentation and the legal requirements.There is never a perfect set up when it comes to therapy and AAC, but it's important to not let an AAC device disrupt therapy implementation. Kate says it's a science and an art, and it's okay for everyone’s therapy to look different. She also shares some resources for how to get more comfortable with your therapy with an AAC user and their device. At the end of the episode, Kate reminds professionals to be compassionate because everyone is coming from a different place. Our job is to help communication skills, and communication is a lot more than learning how to ask for things.I hope that you were able to gain some new information or will utilize the resources discussed today to empower communication with your clients and better improve your therapy! What's Inside:Shared communication and collaboration.What is the “Communication Bill of Rights”.AAC assessment through intervention.Resources for getting comfortable with AAC.
8/3/202140 minutes, 48 seconds
Episode Artwork

#031: Parent Training and Speech Therapy with Nikki McRory

The family-centered approach is a key component of therapy at Nikki McRory’s facilities, McRory Pediatric Services. Nikki is on the podcast today, sharing how she uses a transdisciplinary approach for speech therapy. She uses the Behavior Skills Training framework in her early intervention programs with both the parents and the learners.What are the steps for Behavior Skills Training with parents?Step One: InformationExplain what the skill you're working on is and why it is important. This can be verbal and written. Step Two: ModelModel and discuss this skill. While demonstrating the specific skill, talk about what you're doing and provide further clarification.Step Three: PracticeRole play with the parents to give them the foundation for the skill, but also allow them to practice with their child.Step Four: FeedbackBe sure to let parents know what they are doing well, but also let them know what to change or improve on. Keep repeating steps 2 and 3 until they are where they need to be.When working with parents, Nikki looks at the whole picture for the family. This means taking into account their cultural, linguistic, and social-emotional differences. Her formula to train parents is directly embedded into her early intervention programs. Every Friday, parents are pulled from the therapy to work on a new skill together with clinicians and will practice with their child in therapy the following week.If you’re a professional feeling nervous about telling parents what to do, remember that parents are the expert on their child, but you are the expert on speech and language. You are in the best position to help parents help their children. Nikki leaves us with a special sentiment for parents about the long haul of therapy and the importance of self-care!Be sure to check out the resources we’ve shared, I hope this has helped professionals get an idea of how to facilitate parent coaching and given some inspiration for parents to get involved in their child’s therapy!What's Inside:The Framework for Behavioral Skills Training.Robust Parent Training Component.What is a Family-Centered Approach?Helping Parents Interact and Communicate with Their Children.
7/27/202136 minutes, 44 seconds
Episode Artwork

#030: Functional Social Skill Instruction - A Chat with Ashley Rose

Social Skills are more than just etiquette and manners. Ashley Rose, founder and clinical director of Mission Cognition Social Skills Development Center, is here with me sharing about the importance of social skill instruction. Ashley describes social skills as the inner workings of social interaction. She takes a very individualized approach when deciding exactly what to work on by learning what exactly is making it difficult for an individual to have positive interactions with themselves or others. Ashley’s centers provide the perfect atmosphere for individualized groups. She has three leveled groups, Group A being the developmental play group, for individuals with emerging language. Groups B and C are best suited to individuals with more language skills, and is her more signature Behavior Skill Training group.The planning for Ashley’s groups focus on individualization. Ashley has developed 15 Global Focus Areas that she uses to target training in her groups. She has also developed an in-house assessment tool to identify these areas. For each group, she uses templates such as Group at a Glance, Student Snapshots, and Goal Sheets. The idea behind all of this is rationale, every group facilitator should be able to explain the ‘why’ behind the goals selected for any individual. The end goal for every play group, whether it be developmental play or behavior skill training, is to give the participants autonomy and allow ease of social interaction in their natural environment. We also touch on the topic of Masking. Autistic voices are speaking out against this practice as harmful and unethical, and Ashley tells us why. At one point, the idea of teaching Masking was to help individuals with Autism reduce the appearance of self-stimulatory behavior to help them “fit in”. However, this behavior is actually a self-regulation tool. Another way Masking has been used is to teach scripting in social situations. Instead of relying on scripting, Ashley teaches language use in a more natural template. Her goal is always to give her students the most autonomy and individuality as possible.Self-advocacy and Independence are the words of the day that Ashley leaves us with. No matter the age, it is important to give your child the tools to communicate what they want and need, but equally what they don’t want. Ashley shared some great resources today and gave some awesome tips for parents and professionals for creating ease in social situations and interactions that will affect their children or students every day. What's Inside:Social Skill InstructionSelecting and Setting Social Skills GoalsIntake, Assessment, and DevelopmentFramework for Planning GroupsPlanning for Generalization, Applying Skills in the Natural EnvironmentMasking 
7/20/202134 minutes, 19 seconds
Episode Artwork

#029: Play-Based Therapy - A Conversation with Emily Cohen

Play-Based Speech Therapy can open the door to so much interaction. My guest, Emily Cohen, talks about using Play-Based Therapy with her clients and all of the benefits it can provide. Emily Cohen works with families with children as young as 15 months old, coaching the parents. We talk about all the elements of play, interaction, and language and I share some pretty cute anecdotes from my therapy experiences with play. Engagement is such a huge part, and the more they are engaged the more meaningful their learning will be. Imitation and nonverbal imitation can be the start of engaging in play. Emily shares the idea of a mirror “game”,  sitting in front of a mirror practicing making large body movements, and even using hand over hand when needed. Patience, flexibility, and following the child’s lead is key when creating an engaging play space for therapy. Kids may not always use or interpret toys or activities in the way we expect things which can make for even more enriching experiences.Stay away from toys that have batteries. When we are interacting with a child and a toy that has all the bells and whistles, moving and making noise, the toy ends up doing the work. Go back to basics and allow the student to use the toy as a prop so that you can truly build new and meaningful interaction.Interaction comes before language, so there are so many opportunities for skills in play even nonverbally. As a speech therapist, Emily coaches parents on playing with their children and working with their kids to find these opportunities. Her advice for parents is to remind them that they are their child's best teacher, every time their child is watching them is an opportunity for learning.What’s Inside:Play-Based Speech TherapyFollowing the child’s leadOpen-Ended ToysFacilitating social, play, and language interactionInteraction before language
7/13/202134 minutes, 56 seconds
Episode Artwork

#028: The Power of Language Samples For Assessment and Intervention - A Talk with Marisha Mets

We have school-based SLP, Marisha Mets with us today. Marisha talks with us about the benefits of using language samples, her tips and tricks, as well as resources from her blog SLP Now. She talks about the origin of these resources, that many teachers and SLPs can relate with. A heavy caseload and a necessity to be efficient led Marisha in the direction she is now to share these tips with other SLPs.We discuss the basics of what a language sample actually is, snapshots of the students' use of language in a functional manner in their natural environment. Marisha highlights that we can use many types of samples including play, conversation, story retell, story generation, expository, and persuasive. All of these samples will elicit varying levels, giving unique information on student performance according to the context.When looking at language samples versus assessments, Marisha talks about the differences in the data. She tells us the importance of knowing not only what students can do and say but if they are making it functional. Task-based assessments can too often lead to confusion when a student can do something on paper but not in their natural environment. We share some times and places to check-in and get a look into a student's natural language function.We talk about how language functionality is a key point in setting goals for students with autism. Students may have the words but not know how to use them. Using language samples can pinpoint this as well as set goals and targets on what we can plan for them.Marisha also shares ideas about how to get these language samples and how to track them. She shares resources she's found along the way as well as those she's created and can be found on her blog. Marisha answers my end-of-episode question with her best advice for other SLPs!What's Inside:What are Language Samples?Why is Language Samples important?How to collect Language Samples?Free Resources
7/6/202132 minutes, 33 seconds
Episode Artwork

#027: Early Intervention Tips - Embedding Language into Everyday Routines With Kimberly Scanlon

Today I have Kimberly Scanlon, licensed and certified speech-language pathologist, best-selling author, and fellow busy parent. She has written two great books in the world of speech therapy, Toddler Talks and My Toddler’s First Words. Kimberly works as a private practice speech therapist doing primarily home-based visits and she is here giving us some tips on how to build early interventions into day-to-day life.Because Kimberly is a home-based therapist, she has less barriers in communicating with parents and families. This allows her to relate to being busy and just trying to fit that language development in.The ideas and advice Kimberly shares today focus around these central questions: What does your day look like? What is your typical routine? What do you like to do with your child? When is the best time of day for you to reach your child?We discuss ways to embed language and early intervention into your routines by finding connection-building activities that don't take away from your daily life. This makes each activity symbiotic with various parents’ personalities, cultures, and what they are at a base level comfortable with.If you’re already cooking or doing laundry, think twice about setting your child in front of a screen. Instead, think about how you could be getting them involved. We discuss how there are so many language opportunities in everything we do and our toddlers just want to be with us. Make chores fun and make them learning opportunities with these tips! Don't be afraid of this undertaking, you don't have to have them participate in the entire chore just a small part.Kimberly leaves us with this special advice, reminding parents to do the best they can and not worrying about being perfect. Take several moments throughout the day every day to just enjoy your child, judgment, and worry-free to be fully present and enjoy the moment!What's Inside:Early intervention and language strategies for busy parentsSimple ideas for embedding language practice into daily life.Kimberly’s special advice to parents.
6/29/202140 minutes, 28 seconds
Episode Artwork

#026: Parents as an Important Part of the Therapeutic Team with Lindsey Nitake

Speech and language development is more than just the words being produced and children need to be emotionally supported and encouraged to communicate. Parental involvement is critical, but professionals are often so focused on the kids that they don’t notice the parents are depleted. Lindsey Nitake uses her Help Me Grow Speech social media accounts to get information out there.Every family is different and unique and the tools we offer need to be adapted to fit with a family’s style, so listening to feedback from parents is important. Sometimes parents are overwhelmed by the wealth of information. They need help to figure out which resources will work for their child.Social media is a great way to provide parents with educational support. It’s the most effective and efficient way to spread the information because it allows you to share resources more widely. It’s particularly useful when in-person sessions are not possible. Lindsey uses TikTok, Instagram, and YouTube to share information.To be better professionals, we need to listen to each other and support each other as well. As a profession, we can be quite combative with each other. It gets very emotionally charged. BCBAs and SLPs may have different approaches but collaboration is important so professionals need to have a team-based mentality.New SLPs have to learn a lot on the job. It’s really hard being a new SLP. Oftentimes, when you start working with kids, you find out that it’s not what you learned in graduate school. You need support to figure out a treatment strategy to help them. Social media is a nice way to provide mentoring.When you’re working on communication, don’t lose sight of the bigger picture. Communication is more than just words. It’s the environment and relationships with people. You have to consider the child and their environment as a whole, and the family unit is a big part of that, which is why having parents on board is so important.What's Inside:The importance of parent involvement in speech-language development.Parent education and support.Sharing SLP resources on social media.Mentoring new SLPs.Collaborative services.
6/22/202133 minutes, 39 seconds
Episode Artwork

#025: Where to Start with Communication Intervention with Lori Frost

Lori Frost is a traditionally trained speech-language pathologist who has spent most of her 40-year career in public schools working with preschool and elementary kids. She met Dr. Andy Bondy when she was working in the Delaware Autism Program and that’s when she began learning about applied behavior analysis. This fundamentally changed her practice and made her more aware of what was leading to good outcomes and what was leading to poorer outcomes for the students she worked with.When she was working with Dr. Bondy in the Delaware Autism Program, they were helping a little boy who was non-speaking. They tried a range of things including speech imitation, sign language, and picture point systems but he made little progress. When he wasn’t able to communicate, he displayed challenging behaviors. It was only when Lori presented individual pictures carefully selected to be of interest to the child, let him touch the picture, and pass it to his communication partner, thus doing something very overtly to communicate, that he made progress. This was the beginning of PECS or the Pyramid Educational Consultants in 1992 where it grew to have 6 phases in its protocol, offices in 15 countries and made the manual available in 16 languages.The long-term goal for the kids is to be as independent as possible and independence is only possible if you initiate, so teaching the kids to initiate communication is the first skill taught in the PECS protocol. The starting point always has to be tailored to each student’s likes and the things they enjoy. It can take time to figure this out. If kids start with PECS at the right time, they usually transition to a speech-generating device quite easily. This normally coincides with phase 4 of the PECS protocol when the kids have mastered the following skills:InitiationPicture discrimination Able to make some picture sentencesEven after this transition, PECS remains a useful backup for when technology fails or is misplaced or forgotten. PECS has great results with younger kids. Around 80% of kids who are six and younger who are on PECS for nine months to a year start to talk.Lori’s most important advice for parents or professionals supporting autistic kids is to listen to the kids and be guided by their wants and needs. What's Inside:How PECS began.How PECS has grown.The importance of initiation of communicationHow useful are speech-generating devices as communication tools?When should speech-generating devices be introduced?
6/15/202132 minutes, 54 seconds
Episode Artwork

#024: Apraxia of Speech- Characteristics, Resources and an SLP Mom’s Journey with Laura Smith

Laura Smith was a speech-language pathologist, mostly in elementary education, before her children were born. After her daughter was born, she realized that she wasn’t reaching her developmental milestones. She crawled and walked late and feeding, dressing, and speech were also delayed. When her daughter was diagnosed with apraxia, she focused her professional interest on learning everything she could about it and started her private practice specializing in childhood apraxia.For many parents, the diagnosis of apraxia feels devastating. They wonder if their child will ever speak. What does the future hold? It’s normal to feel sad and to grieve and there should be no guilt about having these feelings. Once you have a diagnosis, you can have a plan.Early Signs of Apraxia:Lack of babbling - a quiet baby.Vowel sounds but a lack of consonants.Lack of a word by age one.Pop-out words - words that a child says a handful of times and then never says again.Word sounds morph into other word sounds.A “go-to” sound - a sound that is frequently repeated.How to find an appropriate therapist:Search on Apraxia-Kids.org for a therapist in your area.Find a therapist through The Prompt Institute.Ask the right questions using the list on SLPMommyofApraxia.com.Resources for speech therapists and parents:Apraxia-Kids.org is full of articles and on-demand webinars.Dr. Strand’s free online course, Diagnosis and Treatment of CAS, is packed full of useful information.Dr. Edwin Maas’s webinar, Principles of Motor Learning and Childhood Apraxia of Speech, is a great place to get an understanding of the basic principles of motor learning.Laura’s most important advice for parents of kids with apraxia:Recognize that this is a lifelong neurological disorder.Early and appropriate intervention promotes the best outcomes.Don’t be scared to advocate for your kid.Have a growth mindset and be willing to learn.What's Inside:Laura’s personal journey of having her child diagnosed with apraxia - testing, assessment, diagnosis, and intervention.Diagnosing apraxia - early signs and characteristicsHow to find an appropriate therapistResources for speech therapists and parents
6/8/202141 minutes, 3 seconds
Episode Artwork

#023: Reading Strategies for All Learners - An Interview with Chloe Hill

Whether you’re a professional or a parent, you can use these strategies from Chloe Hill in the classroom, in therapy, or at home. As a pediatric Speech-Language Pathologist, Chloe’s focused on pre-reading or emerging reading skills. She works with students to help them develop phonological awareness. For young readers, it can be as simple as:Becoming aware of lettersUnderstanding that letters stand for somethingExposing them to booksPointing out print while out in publicChloe and I also cover some of our favorite reading strategies in the classroom. Chloe loves the CROWD strategy which stands for:C- Completion promptR- Recall promptO- Open-ended promptW- Wh questionsD- Distancing promptWhat if a book is too hard for a child to understand? We also cover strategies you can use to adjust it for a child’s level. This episode is chock-full of so many early learning resources that can help any parent or professional who is looking for inspiration. Check out Chloe’s TPT store or follow her Instagram account for more ideas too.What's Inside:A book can be a window or a mirror into a different world, and we should consider the diversity of our literature collection for the children we teach.How Chloe uses the CROWD technique to teach different reading concepts throughout a story.We should be mindful that reading progress looks different for everyone.How is reading development taught to children with complex communication needs?
6/1/202135 minutes, 24 seconds
Episode Artwork

#022: Autism as a Family Experience - An Interview with Michele Portlock

Michele’s oldest daughter’s first word was “calculator”. Because she was highly verbal and  seemed to need less intervention, Michele struggle to get a diagnosis for her. Her second son’s presented quite differently, but Michele suspected that he too had autism. Knowing that early intervention was key, Michele was so disappointed to realize that it took until they were pre-teens to get help. She just wanted to understand why her children behaved the way that they do, and this sent her on a journey to get a Master’s in Behavioral Therapy.Michele speaks directly to parents in her podcast Navigating the Spectrum. As a mom and an ABA therapist, she knows that an autism diagnosis can have an emotional pull on parents. For her though, the diagnosis was a relief since it means that she could get to work helping her children.In this episode, we have a great conversation about some of the negative perceptions about ABA therapy, and how she approaches those challenges in her practice. She points out that you can do speech all day when you’re in the office, but that it only starts to click when the child also does speech at home with their family. One of the major reasons that she approaches therapy as a whole family event is that she knows exactly what it’s like as an autism mom herself. She practices inside Colorado, and outside the state, she provides teletherapy services.We are putting together a top-notch teacher of ABA therapists and SLPs to provide teletherapy beyond Ohio. I am so excited for this new venture that will be able to help more children and parents around the world. Check out my website for more information.What's Inside:For girls and highly verbal children, getting an autism diagnosis can be especially difficult since they don’t present like the checklists that most doctors are working from.Because she knows that there may be a team outside the school system, Michele works hard to include parents in the IEP goals so that everyone can be on the same page.As a parent and an ABA therapist, Michele would like Speech-Language Pathologists to know that she doesn’t always understand their lingo.
5/25/202138 minutes, 57 seconds
Episode Artwork

#021: Learning and Living an Adventure Filled Life with Her 2 Sons with Autism- A Talk with Kelsey General

After Kelsey’s son started seeing a speech regression at 15 months old, she started on the journey to have him diagnosed. Pretty soon she realized that her second son was also exhibiting many of the same signs. Kelsey moved from Alaska to Canada because she hoped that universal healthcare would help her, but the waitlists in Canada were so long that she soon saw that without taking a more active role in therapy, she wouldn’t have good services for her sons.When the local therapy center told Kelsey, “Brentley cannot come if he doesn’t wear a helmet”, that was the last straw for her. Because there was no plan for how a helmet was going to help him or what the plan was to eventually remove the helmet. It was just their quick solution to an immediate problem. That’s when Kelsey decided that she could use Mary Barbera’s courses and her own strategies to help Brentley.I’m really into teaching my students lifelong leisure skills for maximum life enjoyment. For families, there can be a lot of barriers to enjoying activities together. I love following Kelsey on Instagram because she’s made it her goal to teach her sons to enjoy the outdoors safely. There are a lot fewer social rules outside and it’s a low-barrier activity.There are parents like Kelsey all over the world. Parents who want the best for their children with autism, but don’t have access to resources or services. Whether it’s a waitlist that’s holding you back, a rural area, or any other of the dozens of reasons that parents can’t get the help they need, I want you to know that I see you. We’re going to be offering more teletherapy services very soon. I’m putting together a dream team so we can expand and help even more people. Check out my website for more information!What's Inside:One of Kelsey’s main goals in therapy is to make sure that her sons aren’t isolated, and that’s really driven her to get outside of her comfort zone.Living in a rural area with limited resources helped Kelsey realize that she can be a primary resource for her children’s services and therapies.Performing what she calls “low-key assessments” lets Kelsey constantly keep tabs on where her sons are at developmentally.
5/18/202135 minutes, 1 second
Episode Artwork

#020: Generalization and Embedding Communication - A Discussion with Braxton Baker

How do you differentiate your speech therapy work from your autism work? Does it even matter? Serving the whole child, Braxton Baker, an SLP, and BCBA is a huge advocate of the big picture approach to therapy. For him, ABA gave him the vocabulary to describe what he's doing, which he can, in turn, apply everywhere. For me, after ten years of being both an SLP and BCBA, I can agree with him. ABA is just how my brain works now, and it helps me approach life with a better understanding of the learning processes.In this conversation today, Braxton shares some of his therapy philosophy. He starts off IEPs and therapy goals with what the end result needs to look like in the natural world. Because he believes that if you’re not focused on the end result, then you miss the entire point of therapy services. You’re going to hear about how he brings in what he calls the 5 Ps into creating better goals and IEPs for his clients:Creating processesGiving them more purposeCreating more possibilitiesMore overall progressMaking more peaceSometimes emotions can run high at an IEP meeting, so Braxton’s approach is to diffuse the situation with “Do you think that this person or anyone here would have intentionally done something to be harmful?”. If the answer to this question is yes, then you have more than a communication problem; you have a trust problem.Braxton’s approach is authentic, and it fits well into the real world. You can connect with him on Facebook. And if you love social media, check out my new TikTok channel!What's Inside:The questions you can ask in an IEP meeting to make sure that all stakeholders are on the same page.How to make your sessions less rigid and embrace flexibility to meet your students’ needs better.Braxton prefers to think of ABA not as a therapy technique, but as a way to describe the world.If generalization doesn’t occur, did you actually teach a new skill?
5/11/202141 minutes, 42 seconds
Episode Artwork

#019: The Power of Teletherapy to Help Students Here and Abroad - A Talk with Erin Long

Since July 2010, Erin Long has been the president and founder of Worldwide Speech. Parents who are living abroad may find themselves seeking specialized speech therapy, but for whatever reason, they’re struggling to find speech-language therapists in the countries they’re living in. That’s where Erin’s company steps in. Her services have expanded over the last decade, and she calls herself “a special ed company for anyone living abroad”. Erin spent a lot of time proving that teletherapy can work, but now it’s what people want.Have you ever dealt with the paperwork for moving an IEP abroad? Erin says that it loses its status as a legal document since it’s created under the auspices of American law. Sometimes companies are reluctant to send employees overseas if there’s a child in the household with an IEP because complying with it in a foreign country can be incredibly hard. Erin’s company provides speech therapy, OT, and special education for children all over the world, no matter where their parents’ jobs take them.Even for rural Americans, teletherapy is a viable option. Children with mobility issues can benefit from virtual services, and older teens who may be reluctant to admit they still go to therapy can see a therapist privately from their home. For some of Erin’s clients, virtual services offer support and a lifeline for the main caretaker who was previously isolated in a community that had no services of any kind.Therapists and teachers have had to adjust in the last year, and it’s been inspiring to watch that pivot! If you want more tips and strategies on how to use teletherapy effectively, sign up for my FREE webinar on supporting children with autism virtually.What's Inside:Rehabilitative services all over the world are just not equal to American standards, so the demand for American therapists is high.Providing services across multiple time zones can lead to some interesting scheduling problems, but with a little planning, families, and providers can flex with this challenge.Even stateside, virtual services can fill a niche for students who aren’t mobile or who live remotely.
5/4/202131 minutes, 46 seconds
Episode Artwork

#018: The Importance of Dreaming Big and Listening - An Inspiring Chat with Landria Seals Green

Landria Seals Green’s mother says, “A child’s education is as good as the adult in front of them.” With that as her mantra, Landria became a medical-based SLP. For 20+ years, she’s focused on AAC technology, and she’s done a lot of AT work. At a Verbal Behavior workshop, she saw Dr. Vince Carbone present what she describes as speech therapy on steroids. She felt confident about her work as an SLP, but in order to become the best kind of therapist and to improve her marketability, she knew that she needed the BCBA certification.What really drew Landria to the dual certifications was the method of collecting data. Becoming a BCBA made her more finite in her methodology and gave her more tools to help her students.  And as a therapist who is looking for any tool that will help her understand the child and see where they’re at, Landria has loved the possibilities that have opened up for her students.Are we working with families to make sure that all of the funds and services they receive actually benefit the child? Landria sees the therapist’s role as a bridge to the child’s future. She listens to the family’s dreams for the child because she has what you might call a “greeter” theory. Is everything that you’re working on with the child only going to land them a job as a greeter at the store? And is that what the family wants for that child?I think you’ll love this big picture approach to therapy that sees the child as a whole person rather than the small parts you might see in your weekly sessions. For more inspirational and fun-filled ideas about SLP and BCBA strategies, follow Landria on her social media channels as SLP Guru.What's Inside:Why Landria prefers to find features on an AAC that fits a student rather than trying to make an AAC work on the student.By focusing on the “rhythm of communication”, Landria teaches students how to respond appropriately to peers, teachers, and casual strangers.Helping students find authentic social connections is a challenge that Landria takes on with a unique out-of-the-box approach.
4/27/202130 minutes, 59 seconds
Episode Artwork

#017: Creative Ideas for Therapy with Older Students - A Chat with Chris Wenger of Speech Dude

Chris Wenger, whom you might also know as Speech Dude, comes from a family of educators. He started off as a special ed teacher, but he moved into the speech-language field when he realized that the tools he needed to help students were in speech pathology. Because he’s been on both sides of the IEP table, and because he was a teacher first, he’s seen a wide variety of students and he knows how to write an IEP that ropes in parents. Today we have a fantastic conversation about creating a curriculum that teaches older students how to interact online or with their peers on social media.Starting with the phrase “How you do anything is how you do everything”, Chris’s interactions with his students online often inspire his TikTok videos and Instagram posts. Students need to be able to make inferences and they need the ability to perspective-take. If you see a picture that you like, you comment once on it. But five times? People will wonder what’s going on with you. If you comment on a really old video or post, it can give away that you’re doing a deep dive on a person’s profile. These are the kinds of scenarios that Chris identifies so he can teach his students how to interact appropriately online.What’s a digital footprint and why should students care? Even for kids in the AP classes, they still need some explicit instruction on online “netiquette” so that they understand that what happens online can affect their offline life. The idea that kids today instinctively understand online behavior doesn’t help kids who actually don’t. That’s where Chris tries to fill in that gap.Chris’s best advice for a future or present SLP is simple: You don’t have to be a perfect SLP; just do your best to be a happy one. Your positive vibrations can be felt throughout your classroom. Check out Chris’s social media channels or his Boom Learning store for more strategies or curriculum for older students.What's Inside:How to get a teen to turn their camera on when no one really wants to.Chris teaches his students about “the hidden curriculum”, or the unspoken rule about how to act online.If you want more engagement out of a classroom or an audience, Chris’s positive energy and approach fires up participants.
4/20/202128 minutes, 53 seconds
Episode Artwork

#016: Creating Environments For All Autistic Individuals to Communicate | Interview with Nathan Morgan

As a young child, Nathan Morgan was diagnosed with autism. Along his journey of speech therapy, IEPs, and occupational therapy, he felt inspired to give back to his community so he went into social work. Today, through his day job and his self-advocacy work, Nathan supports families who are trying to navigate what autism means.Within the autism community, people have different ways they like to interact with other people. Some may prefer a blend of verbal and sign language, or only verbal, or some verbal but mostly some form of technology. Unfortunately, verbal communication is still the communication that most people want to push, and this leads to some tension over how to encourage inclusivity when everyone may prefer a blend of communication methods.The pandemic has been an awesome opportunity for individuals with autism to connect with others in ways that make them feel the most comfortable. Nathan approaches this with the question, “What can we take moving forward that will help us improve our community?”. From virtual conferences to Facebook groups to face-to-face game nights, Nathan shares a variety of ways that the autism community is interacting and communicating with each other throughout the pandemic.If you’re looking for more ways to engage and communicate with your students, check out my FREE April webinar called 5 Strategies to Help Your Students with Autism Engage and Communicate. Everyone who attends the live session will receive free therapy material and a certificate of participation. See you there!What's Inside:Knowing that communication is going to look differently for different people, Nathan has created group interactions that allow adults and teenagers with autism to communicate in the way that they feel most comfortable.Nathan shares his thoughts on how autism can be weaponized in language and discusses both his professional opinion and personal perspective on whether to say “autistic” or “person with autism”.For adults with autism, it can be harder to find resources, especially when you combine that with the myth that autism is a childhood disease, so Nathan is taking on that challenge with his Facebook group.
4/13/202133 minutes, 26 seconds
Episode Artwork

#015: Help Me Find My Voice Course

Are you nervous before a therapy session because you don’t know how it will go? Let’s make therapy fun and functional again by giving you the tools you need to reach every single one of your students. If you have students with autism and they’re not making a lot of progress, or you’ve used every trick in the book to help a student and you’re stumped, my course Help Me Find My Voice is a great next step for you.Inside Help Me Find My Voice, you’ll learn:Assessments to use with studentsCommon SLP terms explainedSimplified goal setting conceptsEasier data collectionHow to plan therapy sessions for students with emerging skillsYou’ll also have lifetime access to this course, plus access to a private Facebook group where you can collaborate with other SLPs.This course is geared for speech-language pathologists, but it also benefits anyone who’s working on communication issues with students. Enrollment is open now, but it will close on April 14th. And I don’t know when I’ll open this course again.We’ve had over 400 people join us already for this 5-hour ASHA-approved course because the bite-sized modules mean you can fit your learning into your busy day. The cost is $99, and we will send you the proper CEU certificates upon completion.I also have a FREE webinar on April 6th, 7th or 13th called 5 Strategies to Help Your Students with Autism Engage and Communicate. If you attend live, you’ll receive free therapy material and a certificate of participation.What's Inside:When you’re seeing a student with autism or with complicated needs and they’re not communicating on their own, what can you do?If you need ASHA CEUs, but don’t have time for a course, I’ve structured this course to meet your current time constraints.Come and collaborate with other professionals to help you breakthrough any roadblocks you might have on difficult cases.
4/6/202121 minutes, 21 seconds
Episode Artwork

#014: Autism Diagnosis and Intervention with Help Me Find My Voice Alumni- Deidra Darst (SLP)

Recently, Deidra Darst was able to take her son who has autism to get his first big haircut in four years in a salon. Using tips she learned in my Help Me Find My Voice course, Deidra’s son has really grown in his communication abilities. As a Speech Language Pathologist, Deidra has seen first hand how ABA techniques can blend or enhance the work she does with clients. You’re going to love hearing how BCBAs and SLPS can collaborate to help students find ways to share their voices.In her work as an SLP, about half of Deidra’s caseload was students with autism. But it wasn’t until her own young son was diagnosed that she got a true window into what a parent was experiencing. She realized that 30 minutes of therapy a week just wasn’t enough, and she wanted to help parents take a more active role in therapy. Since then, she’s learned how to support parents better in her SLP practice, and she leads with the phrase, “If you have questions, ask”.How can SLPs and BCBAs learn from each other? This idea of collaboration is one that Deidra and I really explore. What we’re doing is similar, but we’re calling it different names. And we miss out on the chance to collaborate positively when we can’t understand each other. Deidra and I talk about some techniques in each of our respective fields that can enhance the work each professional does for a child with autism.Be sure and check out the Help Me Find My Voice course that helped launch Deidra’s success, and send her an email if you have any questions.What's Inside:Using vocabulary that parents and other professionals can understand and improve the chances that our goals are aligned and everyone’s headed in the same direction.Teletherapy has had a surprising benefit for therapists because it’s given them more contact and communication with parents.Deidra’s advice for parents and professionals working with autistic children.The hardest part of therapy is actually communicating with the team and making sure we’re all on the same page.
3/30/202131 minutes, 43 seconds
Episode Artwork

#013: Strategies for Generalizing Language Skills with Katie Castro

How do we help our students generalize their language skills in the community and the larger school environment? Fellow “unicorn”, BCBA, and SLP, Katie Castro is an alumni of my Help Me Find My Voice course, and she’s also a clinical director of speech therapy at Children’s Autism Center.You can’t just hope that a student figures out how to generalize on their own. As therapists, we can build a system that helps lead them to generalize. Generalization is teaching students to apply skills in different environments and circumstances. We may not realize that when we teach a word, there are many different examples of that word. For example, how many kinds of dogs are there? If we show a picture of a Labrador and only that kind of dog, it doesn’t teach a child the variety that is inside the word “dog”.It’s hard for therapists to have the resources they need to teach generalization which is why I ended up creating some. Katie talks about how she uses multiple examples and teaching loosely to help a child learn a less strict definition of a word.It’s important to keep really specific data when you’re working with students, but when you combine specific data with IEP goals and first trial data, it can be difficult to keep track of where a student is progressing. If you want to make your progress reporting easier, then Katie and I have some techniques to streamline the process.For more SLP strategies, be sure to check out my FREE webinar 5 Strategies to Help Students Engage and Communicate. Register now for this April event.What's Inside:How I use a variety of flashcards to expand the concept of basic vocabulary words like dog, cat, or car.Maintenance goals can feel like a drag for a child, so I share ways that I keep it fresh for that child.Collecting and reporting data might feel complicated, but Katie and I have both streamlined the process so that it’s easier and takes less time.Katie incorporates parent training to help reinforce what a child learns in speech therapy, and that has actually been made easier by the pandemic and telehealth sessions.
3/23/202137 minutes, 3 seconds
Episode Artwork

#012: Autism Therapy and the Importance of Play with Liz Willis

There are times I feel stressed as a therapist because I want to get through all of the goals for my therapy session, so that’s why I love Liz’s playful approach to therapy. Liz Willis is an SLP who went back to school for her BCBA so that she could provide speech therapy and ABA services. Her dual degrees have made her feel more confident in the services that she provides, and you can really see how they inform how she structures her therapy sessions.It can be tempting to jump straight into the language piece of an IEP, but Liz suggests that you consider focusing on the social and play piece first. Every interaction begins with social engagement, and when therapists nail down the basics of engagement first, expanding into other skills can reap dividends.Liz is passionate about supporting teachers and providers, and she shares some of her favorite strategies including:How to use play centers to teach language skills.Her favorite assessments and why you should use more than one.How to encourage play in students who only like one kind of play.As an educator or service provider, there are going to be times when you just don’t have the skills your students need. Liz says that you need to recognize when you don’t know something and refer your clients out to someone else. There are so many pieces to the therapy puzzle, and collaborating makes your job easier. If you’d like to connect with Liz, you can reach her at her website, on Instagram, or at Liz@communicationandbehaviorsolutions.com.What's Inside:How early learners who have autism may play differently from their typically developing preschoolers, and why that matters.Does every moment need to be language enriched?Which comes first: engagement or play? Liz gives her thoughts on this chicken vs. egg dilemma.
3/16/202126 minutes, 24 seconds
Episode Artwork

#011: AAC Assessment and Intervention- SLP and OT collaboration with The Fanny Pack Therapists

Have you ever worked with a student who needs an AAC, but you don’t know which one would work best for them? If you have, then you’ll appreciate this episode. Annabeth and Mara from The Fanny Pack Therapist have found that their respective therapy styles, as a speech language pathologist and an occupational therapist, mesh so well that they teamed up to help more students.Annabeth and Mara love how AACs empower students to find ways to communicate their thoughts and needs with the people around them. They’ve found that AACs don’t prohibit verbal speech, but simply give a child a way to communicate while they work toward verbal speech. You don’t want to miss their ABCs of AACs on their Instagram page from October 2020.By collaborating together, SLPs and OTs can get a more holistic view of a child. While the SLP is evaluating a child’s expressive and receptive skills, an OT can come in and see where a child’s fine motor skills are. And once they’ve passed the initial evaluation, together, the SLP and OT can try signs, low-tech options, verbal speech, and just about anything else to see what works.I hope this episode gets your wheels turning on how you can work with other professionals or how you can help your students or clients use AACs to meet their therapy goals. Make sure you check out The Fanny Pack Therapist for more ideas on collaborating with other therapists.What's Inside:Listen to how Annabeth and Mara collaborate in the age of COVID.The importance of shared goals with other intervention specialists, and what that can look like for your students.Communication is a basic right, and an AAC gives a student a chance to communicate.How can someone improve their competency in the AAC world if they don’t have any previous experience?
3/9/202132 minutes, 6 seconds
Episode Artwork

#010: Getting Started With AAC- An Interview with Susan Berkowitz

Something I find so inspiring is to watch a student find a way to communicate with the people who exist in their world. For over 47 years, Susan Berkowitz has been helping students with autism learn to communicate by whatever means are necessary. Using Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC), Susan is reaching students who are complete non-speakers or who struggle to communicate the full range of their thoughts and feelings.Susan has a wealth of knowledge, and she’s passionate about helping teachers, parents, and fellow Speech-Language Pathologists find the tools they need to teach their students. She tells the amazing story of one of her students who stopped his self-injurious behavior after she created a POG book filled with 120 pages of pictures that he was able to use to communicate that he wanted to run outside.There are so many options for AACs, and since the technology for this field is so new, there will continue to be new options every year. Susan has found it helpful to become good friends with the AAC customer service reps so that she has direct insight into this industry.If you think one of your students would benefit with an AAC, or you’d like to learn more about apps, games, or strategies that you can use in your therapy sessions, Susan is really a wealth of information. Check out her book, her websites, or her TPT store for more resources.What's Inside:Why we should never rearrange the symbols on a child’s AAC system.How to move a student beyond requesting and into communicating.Susan’s tips for using technology to teach students how to communicate.If you have limited cognitive energy, you’re limited by how much effort you can put into communication. 
3/2/202135 minutes, 47 seconds
Episode Artwork

#009: Autism Social Skills from Assessment to Intervention with Shayna Gaunt

Can you imagine if someone stood over you and evaluated your behavior with a clipboard while you were trying to act naturally? Organically evaluating your student or client’s progress while they participate in group activities can be a challenge, but it’s one that Shayna Gaunt happily takes on.There are a variety of assessments that are available to use to help you figure out where a student is at, and Shayna often combines assessments because none of them are completely perfect. She’s rewritten the VB-MAPP to help with some of the more abstract skills that students have to learn, and she shares with me how she creates groups for in-person or telehealth therapy sessions.Shayna and I know that it can be lonely and overwhelming for therapists, especially since so many of us are virtual now. I am so excited to announce The ABA Forum, which will be a free virtual conference for SLPs, RBTs, and ABA therapists to help give them resources to support their clients. On March 2nd, 3rd, and 4th, we invite you to join us from 7:00-9:00 pm for a chance to network with other experts. And while this event is free to attend, CEUs will be available to purchase if you need them.What's Inside:When putting together a group session, a certain level of independence is needed before a group will benefit the student.Social skills can mean a wide variety of skills, from ordering something from McDonald’s to standing in line at school.Learn how to obtain CEUs through The ABA Forum on March 2nd-4th.
2/23/202134 minutes, 13 seconds
Episode Artwork

#008: Autism Early Signs and Intervention with Dr. Mary Barbera

The day before his 3rd birthday, Dr. Mary Barbera’s son Lucas was diagnosed with moderate-to-severe autism, and she felt like she’d fallen into a hole. Even though she had a nursing background, she still felt completely unprepared to help her son. Lucas wouldn’t keep his clothes on, he only spoke pop-out words, and she had no idea how to even start helping him.Like many other parents, Mary took on the role of the lead therapist as she worked to find proven therapies and techniques that would help Lucas. In the early 2000s, it was like the Wild West in the ABA world. Inspired by her work trying to find solutions for Lucas, Mary went on to get a BCBA-D, and wrote her dissertation on The Effects of Fluency-Based Autism Training on Emerging Educational Leaders.Mary is passionate about helping families help their young children. She believes that the sooner we can get to the parents and teach them how to help their children, the better their families will be. Today, 1 in 6 children have some kind of developmental disorder. The increase in this population puts stress on the medical community that hasn’t quite caught to the demand. Many of these parents are sitting on a waitlist because therapy places are backlogged.The information that Mary shares help parents get a headstart on how to help their children, and it puts tools into their hands that help them become their child’s best advocate. Her newest book Turn Autism Around: An Action Guide for Parents of Young Children with Early Signs of Autism will be published on March 30th, and if you sign up now, you can join her book launch team.What's Inside:Mary shares the early signs of autism that parents and professionals should be prepared to identify.Why Mary chooses to focus on the age 1-5-year-old age group, and why she stopped giving lectures to focus on other means of getting her message out.Mary shares some of her most influential mentors, and how she’s been able to collaborate with some of them.
2/16/202138 minutes, 15 seconds
Episode Artwork

#007: Autism Social Skills: Answering and Asking Questions with Lisa Chattler

Lisa Chattler works with middle school and high school students as an SLP. In this podcast, we talk about how to teach conversation-based skills to students who are struggling with asking and answering questions. All of us learn some form of “faking it”, where we pretend to be interested in casual small talk with strangers or acquaintances. For children with autism, this back-and-forth can be even harder as they learn to ask and answer questions while actively listening to their conversational partner.Lisa’s strategies cover different learning styles for students, and include:Using videos as prompts to retell a storyTeaching students to summarize a storyHaving an expository retellModeling a conversation and asking “Did I get that right?”Transcribing the conversationStudents who are confident in therapy can sometimes stumble during tests or in classroom discussions. Why do some students avoid asking for help? Lisa shares her thoughts on the self-advocacy piece of asking questions that we may be overlooking as we work with our patients.What's Inside:The classroom goal structure can affect whether a student learns to ask questions.Teaching exactly to the test will completely miss the concept of whether a student can answer questions correctly.How to create IEP goals for teaching students how to ask and answer questions.The one piece of advice that Lisa, after 42 years as an SLP, would pass on to new speech-language pathologists.
2/9/202127 minutes, 19 seconds
Episode Artwork

#006: Autism Early Intervention Foundation Skills For Toddlers with Cari Ebert

Pediatric speech-pathologist Cari Ebert’s passion is the birth to three stages where she focuses on laying the foundation for children to begin to speak. And even though my focus is on middle schoolers with autism, we have a similar approach to teaching children. I loved hearing how Cari lays down a solid foundation of nonverbal skills before she moves on to teaching speech.A big focus of Cari’s therapy work is setting a child up for success by teaching them how to “learn to learn”. Speech therapy isn’t about making the child less autistic; it’s helping the child learn how to engage with the important people in their life. With that in mind, Cari shares how she uses these 5 foundational skills to prepare a child to learn.Cari's 5 Autism Early Intervention Foundation SkillsNon-verbal imitationJoint attentionSelf-regulationPurposeful playEarly language developmentCari is passionate about helping children with autism communicate in any way possible. Listen carefully to how she uses PIE, or participation, independence, and engagement, to move children forward with her goal to help them find a way to communicate with the people they care about.What's Inside:How to get a child in a ready space to learn requires strategies to bring them up to or down to the right level.AAC should not be the last resort because every child needs and deserves a way to communicate.The language Cari uses when she discusses a child’s behavior is something she carefully considers so that it doesn’t affix a negative label on the child.Every moment doesn’t have to be a speaking moment with the child, especially when you’re in the beginning stages of building rapport.
2/2/202137 minutes, 39 seconds
Episode Artwork

#005: Social Skill Instruction and Teletherapy with Tricia Detig

Working on social skills virtually presents its own special challenge, and I am so excited to talk with Tricia Detig from Detig Dialect about strategies she uses in her virtual therapy sessions. Tricia works with children in grades 6-8, and she really feels like these students are thriving academically with virtual work.However, being at home and away from constant peer interaction means that students are even more distracted by phones and everything going on around them, and their therapy sessions focusing on social skills have taken on a new challenge.Tricia has restructured her therapy session so that in small chunks of time, she’s able to:Focus on small skillsPractice that skillEmbed a couple of gamesThrow in some targetsBecause her students are older, Tricia is able to use virtual games like Baamboozle and Among Us to reinforce social skill goals. There are some other expectations that she just doesn’t have for this age group, like letting them sometimes leave the camera off, but by explicitly giving instructions, she’s able to control the session’s outcome much better. More than ever, middle school students with autism need someone they can trust, and that has continued to be a focus for Tricia throughout the pandemic.What's Inside:How Tricia uses Google hangouts, Google chat, and Google calendar to connect with her students.As part of a larger objective to help students transition to high school, Tricia teaches them how to talk to people that they don’t want to talk to.Tips for teaching social skills goals when everyone is still stuck at home.Tricia shares her favorite games and how she uses them to reinforce therapy sessions, and to reward students’ behavior.
1/26/202130 minutes, 1 second
Episode Artwork

#004: Building Engagement For Students With Autism with Jessie Ginsburg

Have you ever worked with students who have trouble engaging in a session? If you have, then you’ll love this conversation with Jessie Ginsburg. As a speech pathologist and the CEO of Pediatric Therapy Playhouse in Los Angeles, Jessie helps young kids on the autism spectrum build foundational skills.For SLPs, one of the biggest misconceptions is that we’re supposed to immediately start working on speech when a child walks in the door. But without foundational skills in place, we won’t be able to have an improvement in speech. That’s why Jessie focuses on three areas first before diving into speech therapy. You’ll hear how she uses regulation, engagement, and motivation to build that foundation for her clients.Therapy can’t occur in a child until they’re in the optimal level of arousal. Think of the challenge of teaching an “Eeyore” energy level child, or a “Tigger” energy level child. Using alerting or calming activities, Jessie talks about how she gets a student’s energy centered just right so that work can begin.Motivation is so specific to each student that it will take some sleuthing to uncover what makes a student want to learn. Jessie loves involving parents to help her get the low-down on what students like, and she often collaborates with parents to see a child’s sensory preferences.Collaborating with other speech-language pathologists can help you strategize when you’re stuck on how to help a child with autism. Connect with Jessie’s Facebook group, or visit ABA Speech for more tips and advice.What's Inside:Hear how Jessie aims to go as long as possible without bringing out a toy in a therapy session.Because every child brings daily challenges with them, Jessie practices flexibility in her practice to meet those challenges.How can you increase a student’s attention to a task once they’re in the perfect optimal space?
1/19/202122 minutes, 43 seconds
Episode Artwork

#003: Autism Speech Therapy IEP Goals

For emerging communicators, defining goals can be so stressful. I want to help relieve that overwhelmed feeling for you that I often had at the beginning of my practice. As you create speech therapy IEP goals, I want you to keep in mind how assessment, collaboration, and functional goals all work together to support and sustain the student as they work with you throughout the year.One of the common tools used in the classroom is a standardized test, but for students with autism, this may not give us the best information. Oftentimes, children with autism may not be able to answer, or their manding may not be assessed. Instead, I prefer to use the VB-MAPP test or the functional communication profile.As you set the early learning goals for your students with autism, you’ll need to consider measurable communication skills they may already have like labeling, verbal imitation, filling in the blank, matching abilities, or group listening skills.Once the initial assessment has been given, and the team collaboration has produced a good picture of where the student is and where the team would like to send him, then it’s time for you to apply a practical and systemic approach to establishing the year’s goals. In this episode, I’ll share with you why these questions are so important to ask as you write the IEP:Why is this goal important for this student?What behavior are we targeting?Is it appropriate for our client?How is this goal specific?Is the goal observable?What does mastery look like?Please take a minute and download my IEP Goal Bank to help your team as you write specific and actionable IEP goals for your students.What's Inside:Strategies for embedding parents’ concerns into their child’s IEP goals.Examples of what a specific, observable goal looks like in the classroom.Because standardized tests can’t measure the progress we are often looking for, I share my favorite assessment tools that will give you a better idea of where your student’s strengths and weaknesses lie.
1/12/202126 minutes, 3 seconds
Episode Artwork

#002: Autism Teletherapy Strategies

I have a great routine established for my students when we’re in person. I love working on yoga with them because I think it’s a lifelong leisure skill. I use cards to demonstrate the yoga pose we’re going to practice and then together we hold the pose for ten seconds. This year, as so many of my tools have had to be adjusted to fit into teletherapy, I’ve been happy to see that I can still do yoga with my students virtually.For many of us, flexing into the teletherapy space has proven to be a challenge. In addition to dealing with unfamiliar technology, we’ve also had to come up with creative ways to teach the same skills without being in person. And we’ve had to find how to get around new barriers for therapy, including the challenge of scheduling and having students at home without parental support.My five favorite autism teletherapy strategies can help you set up boundaries and expectations for students that will help them thrive in this challenging season.Set up expectations for how the environment should be structured around the student.Decide how we can engage students during therapy.Use resources that are engaging, including my 3 favorite ones that I’ve just discovered this year.Include some parent training that will help parents become better therapy partners.Recap the therapy session so that everyone is on the same page at the end of the session.Despite the challenges of this year, I’ve found that teletherapy has made it easier to communicate with families, and it’s led to more frequent communications as well. This opportunity can help us build stronger relationships with our students’ families.What's Inside:Three of my favorite resources for engaging students over distance learning.The ways that you can support parents as they navigate teletherapy.As you recap the therapy session, you’ll get a chance to frame the session in a way that parents can understand what was addressed in that session. My favorite virtual field trips that will improve your therapy experience and help you connect with your students.
1/5/202130 minutes, 20 seconds
Episode Artwork

#001: Welcome to Autism Outreach

One of the most meaningful moments I had as a speech therapist was as I was watching a mentor work with a student over the age of 18. She was teaching him to use a static device to request the things that he enjoyed, and it was such a joy to watch him find a way to communicate with the world.In this podcast series, I’m going to teach strategies that help children with autism learn to communicate. As a Speech-Language Pathologist and a board-certified behavior analyst, I love working in both public and private settings. It gives me an opportunity to see many different kinds of situations and students and adjust my communication techniques to reach each one.Whatever setting a Speech-Language Pathologist is in, you can find them working on a variety of tasks like:Teaching augmentative communicationCreating functional IEPsTaking meaningful dataWorking together as a teamHelping students engage in therapyNo matter the tasks, the setting, or the age of a patient, if a topic touches on communication in any way, I’m going to address it here with my guests. Don’t miss the preference assessment that I use to engage with my patients who are on the autism spectrum that immediately helps you connect with them.What's Inside:Why I love speech-language therapy and my goals for this podcast series.The education and training I received formally were fantastic, but stepping into a real-world practice has made me realize that I want to teach other therapists about learning new skills that will reach the variety of children and adults that they’ll see.My number one strategy for engaging hard-to-reach children, and how you can implement it in your own practice.
12/29/202019 minutes, 24 seconds