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Kids With Special Needs and Disabilities
Reply to "I am not sending my child to the assigned class "
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Also, if you HAD to go with a private speech therapist, I bet that SLP (as long as they specialize in working with children) would go to her private preschool program for services. So at 10am Ms../Mr. X would go to your daughter's school and either pull her out of class to work with her OR work with her among her peers. They would base this on what she needs and what works best for her - and then if the SLP is there, s/he can meet with the teachers at your private preschool and discuss how they can support your daughter's speech development (and/or whatever else you are working on). So is there a better way to encourage her language? Is there a better way to ask questions to elicit what the SLP wants? Is there a better way for her to do things (encourage her to be the "speaker" for the class to encourage a child who wouldn't normally be the one chosen, OR if that shuts your daughter's speech down, requesting that she not be called on but rather get her to speak in other ways). I'm just saying, the SLP might very well partner well with the teachers. [/quote] Her language has actually progressed to the point where the only thing she needs help with now is just certain letter combos. Like, F can still be P in some words (will say friend with an f, but if the f is in the middle of a word it might still come out as a p). I am confident working with a good SLP like she did earlier this year would continue to help her with those little issues because last year when we had her evaluated at 4, her articulation was very bad and she couldn't hold conversations. Would answer a question, then drop it. Now will have full conversations, volley responses and questions back and forth, etc. My mom was actually here last week and cried all the time at what a difference it was to talk to her. So her language is actually great, comprehension is at level, etc. but certain articulation issues still need to be worked on. The teachers and directors at her preschool are fabulous and would work with us in whatever we decided, I'm sure. [/quote]
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