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Practical Tips SLPs will Love for Speech Therapy: Unintelligibility

Practical Tips SLPs will Love for Speech Therapy: Unintelligibility

Are your students impossible to understand? Improve their intelligibility in functional communication after reading these practical tips and help them communicate more clearly.

When preschoolers have unintelligible speech, they often get frustrated easily since they aren’t understood. They don’t understand why their needs aren’t being met. And usually, they don’t have the language skills to reword or otherwise clarify their message.

The good news is that your students can learn to speak understandably when you use the correct approach. Working on a single sound at a time just doesn’t cut it. But these tips will help you get started using a broader approach to make a bigger impact earlier in therapy.

speech therapist working with unintelligible student

 

 


Unintelligibility Tips

1. Look for sound error patterns in their speech.

Often students who are highly unintelligible have patterns of speech errors going on, so working on one sound at a time is a drop in the bucket!

 

2. Choose your therapy targets carefully.

Clinically speaking, I’ve found a few tips to be useful.

 

3. Use language samples to help determine target words and phrases.

It is not possible to practice all of the words! Especially with more impaired students who have multiple issues and need more repetition to make improvements, we really need to focus on the most vital and functional skills to have an impact in daily life.

The rest of the session can include practice with words that tie into the language activities for the day, but the frequently used word list gets lots of practice and review!

 

4. Pay attention to communication needs throughout the child’s day.

If your student has to practice many times to gain the skill, be sure to start with some words or phrases that are functional!

 

5. Watch for extraneous movements during speech production.

Be sure to watch your students as they attempt new sounds or new words! Some behaviors to notice include:

These signals indicate that they could be having problems with jaw stability or grading and moving their articulators independently. Practicing speech production with some extra stability support is sometimes all that a student needs to get better sound production.

I learned so much working jointly with my students’ OTs and PTs. Together, we make a terrific team! If you suspect problems with motor planning or stability issues, these are the people you need to speak to first!

If you are interested in reading more about the development of disassociated jaw, lip, and tongue movements for speech production, check out these resources. (Please note that I am not a proponent of using non-speech exercises, but I have found touch and placement cues to be very useful for eliciting sound productions.)

 

5. Immediately apply the sound practice to functional or linguistic contexts.

After practicing the motor skills of sound production, be sure to use the same sounds in a context that will help your students retain and use the newly learned skill. This can be done in a few ways.

 

Simple artic errors? No problem! But when a child is unintelligible and has multiple needs, it can be overwhelming trying to decide the best way to start therapy. Try out these tips and comment on what worked for you!

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