Howdy everyone,
I’m sorry that some of you have not heard from me for a little while. Things have been crazy busy!!!
Not only am I due to have our second child any day now but I have also been running some training workshops here in Sydney for other speech pathologists to share my knowledge and experience in working with children with autism.
I really enjoyed doing the workshops and the attendees got a lot out of them, which was great!
One of the main aims of running the workshops was to help shift the way that speech pathologists work with children on the autism spectrum. I figured that if I can help fellow speech pathologists work more effectively with these kids then I will indirectly be helping many more families because they will have greater access to speech pathologists who are trained with the unique knowledge and skills that are needed for treating children with autism.
The title of the workshop is “Effective Speech Pathology… what works and what doesn’t”. Some of the key messages that I shared were:
- It IS possible to treat the social part of the triad of impairment
- When we use a developmental approach to treatment we are treating the core deficits of autism
- We must get to know the ‘individual differences’ of the child if we are to achieve greater therapy outcomes
- Parent training and empowerment is an essential part of effective treatment
- Practical and meaningful speech pathology is a must
I then went on to practically explain how I carry out ‘effective therapy’ with the families I treat, using lots of client examples and video footage etc.
In a nutshell….
As speech pathologists I strongly believe that we need to be carrying out a ‘relationship building’ and ‘developmental style’ of therapy rather than sitting these children down at a table, drilling them with specific, isolated skills that are often not meaningful or motivating for the child.
After specialising in the treatment of autism for over 12 years and consulting to many different programs, I’ve treated enough clients and seen the case history of enough families to know that this structured style of teaching does not address the core deficits of autism or lay the foundations for even more effective learning.
I am a very open-minded therapist and certainly not ‘stuck in my ways‘ but I still continue to practice a relationship building style of therapy today for one very simply reason… because I find it get results.
My plan now (after our baby is born!), is to travel around the other capital cities of Australia to carry out the workshops there, then head overseas to do the same. Towards the end of the year I’ll be running more advanced training days for speech pathologists to increase their skills even further.
So along with continuing to manage Connect Therapy and creating more Training Resources I’m very excited to now be training other therapists in autism as I know that it will reach so many more families and quite possibly indirectly assist each one of you in your journey as well as other families that will follow in your footsteps!
So that’s what I’ve been up to… how about you guys?
How effective have you found Speech Therapy to be in your child’s treatment? What type of therapy approach has worked for you? I’d love to hear your experiences from a parent’s perspective.
Please leave your comments in the boxes provided below.
best wishes
Monique