Description
Includes printable groceries advertisements, coupons, calculating sales/discounts activities, sequencing steps, and problem-solving for functional reading therapy.
$12.99
60 pages of functional reading activities including organization tasks to target speech-language goals.
Includes printable groceries advertisements, coupons, calculating sales/discounts activities, sequencing steps, and problem-solving for functional reading therapy.
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Swallowing is a complex process that involves a number of different muscles and nerves. Dysphagia is a swallowing disorder, individuals may have difficulty swallowing food, liquids, and/or their own saliva. Dysphagia can lead to serious medical conditions such as aspiration pneumonia, dehydration, malnutrition, or other complications. Treatment for dysphagia may include diet modifications, swallowing exercises and maneuvers, compensatory techniques, and postural changes. This document includes easy to read dysphagia exercise handouts for the following eight (8) exercises:
What is Phonological Components Analysis?
Developed and modeled after Semantic Feature Analysis (SFA), Phonological Components Analysis (PCA) is an evidence-based technique that aims to improve awareness of phonological properties of words and support word retrieval in PWA. First introduced by Leonard et al. (2008), PCA showed positive outcomes in 7 out of the 10 individuals studied and some generalization for untrained words. Van Hees et al. (2013) further investigated PCA by comparing it to SFA. In this study, 7 out of 8 people showed improvements for treated words with PCA and only 4 people showed improvements with SFA (Van Hees et al., 2013). Van Hees et al., 2013 suggests that individuals with semantic difficulties will likely have more success with PCA and it is expected that individuals with phonological deficits will show improvements with both treatment techniques.
Leonard, C., Rochon, E., & Laird, L. (2008). Treating naming impairments in aphasia: Findings from a phonological components analysis treatment. Aphasiology, 22(9), 923-947.
Van Hees, S., Angwin, A., McMahon, K., & Copland, D. (2013). A comparison of semantic feature analysis and phonological components analysis for the treatment of naming impairments in aphasia. Neuropsychological Rehabilitation, 23(1), 102-132.
This PDF includes:
The Functional Therapy Materials Bundle includes 350+ pages of functional activities and printable resources that target real world cognitive-linguistic skills.
Included in this bundle:
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Annarose F. (verified owner) –
This is great for my LT pt’s! Thanks!
Tobey Nunnally (verified owner) –
Great product
Elizabeth K. (verified owner) –
Thanks so much! great resource for my students 🙂
Bilingual Speech and Language (verified owner) –
Great job!
Alexandra Bergman (verified owner) –
Great resource, thank you!