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Speech Therapy
For Children & Teenagers.
Why do children work with a Speech Therapist?
Speech therapy helps children who have trouble communicating develop critical speech, language and interaction skills.
Here are some examples of what we do
Speech & Fluency
Speech sounds errors that impair speech fluency include:
Replacing a sound with another sound
Omitting sounds from words
Distorted sounds
Inserting extra sounds in words
Stuttering and disfluency
Language
Receptive Language: Understanding what others say.
Expressive Language: The language we use when speaking.
Pragmatic Language: This is social communication, how we communicate with others. This includes body language, eye contact, proximity, tone and voice volume.
Literacy
Phonemic Awareness: Identifying individual sounds in words. This is a prerequisite for reading and spelling.
Phonological Awareness: Identifying aspects of language such as words, syllables, initial and final sounds, and manipulating sounds in words to create new words.
Comprehension: The ability to understand and respond appropriately to written or verbal content.