Teaching Easy Starts for Elementary Kids Stuttering
Stuttering Therapy Activity Ideas
In this episode of The Speech and Language Kids Podcast, speech-language pathologist Carrie Clark explores different stuttering therapy activities that you can do in speech therapy to help your kiddos who stutter.
Preschooler Stuttering Therapy:
Indirect Therapy:
- Identify fast vs. slow speech from the therapist
- Practice using fast and slow speech for the child
- Practice slow, smooth, exaggerated speech
Direct Therapy:
- Identify bumpy vs. smooth in the therapist's speech
- Practice bumpy and smooth speech for the child
- Identify the child's speech as bumpy or smooth during play
- Ask the child if his speech was bumpy or smooth
- Response Contingency: Praise/Reinforce smooth speech and provide immediate, direct corrective feedback for disfluent speech ("Oops, that was bumpy, let's try it again) http://www.speechandlanguagekids.com/stop-stuttering-preschoolers-current-research-based-methods/
**Always watch students for signs that therapies are making it better or worse and adapt as needed.
Elementary-Aged Stuttering Therapy:
1. Learn About the Respiratory System
Start by doing a lesson all about the respiratory system. Use pictures, charts, models, or whatever you have available to you. Practice inhalation and exhalation, as well as deep and shallow breathing with the students. Talk about how we speak on exhalations and practice taking a deep breath in and then slowly exhaling while saying a single word. Gradually increase to speaking in longer phrases and sentences while using gentle exhalations. Talk about breathing timing during conversations (when to take a breath).
2. Practice Smooth, Prolonged Speech while Playing Games
Take whatever games you have available and practice using smooth, prolonged speech during those games. For example, you can have children play "Go Fish" and make sure they slow down and elongate their words when asking "Do you have a…". Or, you can have them take a turn in a board game and use their slow, smooth speech to describe what happened (ex: "I rolled a four. I'm going to move four spaces").
3. Learn About the Types of Stuttering
Help students learn about the different types of stuttering and which ones they do. Help them identify when they have stuttered and what type it was. Practice the different types of stutters to desensitize them to it.
4. Teach the Students Stuttering Modification Techniques
Help the students learn the different techniques they can use if they anticipate a stutter (preparatory set), are in the middle of a stutter (pull-out), or have stuttered and can't move on (cancellations). Practice demonstrating these while playing games (pretend to stutter so you can use a technique).
Middle School/High School Stuttering Therapy:
Speech Modification (Fluency Shaping) Techniques:
Speech modification (including fluency shaping) strategies (Bothe, 2002; Guitar, 1982, 2013) include a variety of techniques that aim to make changes to the timing and tension of speech production or that alter the timing of pauses between syllables and words. These modifications are used regardless of whether a particular word is expected to be produced fluently. Strategies associated with speech modification include:
- rate control,
- continuous phonation,
- prolonged syllables,
- easy onset,
- light articulatory contact.
Other speech modification strategies, including appropriate use of pausing, are used not only to increase the likelihood of fluent speech production but also to improve overall communication skills (e.g., intelligibility, message clarity, etc.). In addition to being used for improving communication skills, pausing is also an effective method of rate control.
Keep in mind the child may be self-conscious about using these techniques.
Stuttering Modification Strategies (Reducing Physical Tension/Struggle)
- Identify where in the speech mechanism physical tension is and release it.
- Traditional stuttering modification strategies include preparatory set, pull-out, and cancellation and require a child to identify a moment of disfluency before, during, or after it occurs, making adjustments to reduce tension and struggle. The specific strategy that is selected will depend on when the client "catches" the disfluency, whether it be following a moment, in the moment, or in anticipation of the moment of disfluency (Van Riper, 1973).
- These strategies, like speech modification strategies, are introduced along a hierarchy of speaking situations that varies both with linguistic demands and with the stressors of the environment.
Strategies For Reducing Negative Reactions (Personal And Environmental Context)
- Desensitization
- Cognitive Restructuring
- Self-Disclosure
- Support Group (grouping your kiddos who stutter)
More Resources for Speech-Language Pathologists:
Looking for more therapy ideas and resources to help you provide the BEST services to your clients? Join us in The SLP Solution, our membership program for speech-language professionals! Inside the membership, you'll find:
- Step-By-Step Guides for teaching a variety of speech/language/communication skills
- Pre-Made Worksheets and Therapy Activities for hundreds of different topics
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- Answers to Your Questionsin our exclusive SLP community
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- Continuing Educationthrough our monthly webinars and webinar recordings
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4 Comments
Source: https://www.speechandlanguagekids.com/stuttering-therapy-activity-ideas/
How long would you recommend working on each step before moving onto the next? I know each student is an individual and all times will probably be different, but in general, how long do you usually do each step before you move on?
I would recommend continuing to work on a single step until the child reaches a comfortable level of mastery or until the child either becomes frustrated or you see that the strategy/technique is not working for the child (the child doesn't make progress in 4-6 weeks)
How long do you typically keep stuttering kiddos in therapy? I know every kiddo is different. For example, I have a student who is in fourth grade and utilizes her strategies in all environments. Her teacher doesn't even know she stutters. The only time she does is at recess when she is talking very excitedly and rapidly. However, I don't want to make her uncomfortable by following her around during recess. Any recommendations?
Hello! Thank you so much for reaching out. Unfortunately, we get a ton of questions every day about how to solve specific speech/language problems. Since we have such a small staff, we aren't able to answer every question that comes through on the website, social media, or via email. If you are a parent, we suggest you reach out to a local speech-language pathologist who can work with your child directly and answer your question.
If you are another speech-language professional, we have created a membership where we pay a full staff to answer questions like this on a regular basis. We would be more than happy to answer your question inside the membership program. We're able to answer more questions in here because we have a full library of questions that we've already answered so our staff can either link you to the answer if it exists, or write you a custom response if needed. We'd love to see you inside the membership!
Click Here to Become a Member: https://www.slpsolution.com/pediatric-signup/.