Schools often get criticized for not teaching enough “real world” skills to kids, and there’s a lot of truth to that statement.
Most of the therapists I work with are worried that what they do in therapy isn’t functional enough to transfer to day-to-day skills; and this is a legitimate concern.
A lot of the clinicians I mentor have somewhere between 30-40 minutes with students; which means they have to make every second count. Some of them wonder if the traditional “pull out” therapy model is even useful at all.
The truth is that there are certain skills that can be effectively addressed in more of an “academic”, small group or 1:1 situation.
When we think about the language skills needed to support reading and literacy, it’s actually ideal to address some of the foundational skills in this “school” format. Otherwise kids don’t get the intensity they need to develop automaticity.
So when we ask the question of whether language skills should be taught in an “academic” format vs. a “functional, real-world” format…it’s not a black or white, either/or kind of a thing. School-age kids need a blend of BOTH.
With that in mind, schools and the people working in them are doing a lot of things right. This is why I feel disheartened when I see negativity directed towards schools suggesting that they’re not teaching kids anything useful.
We don’t need to burn it all to the ground; we need to find out which things schools are doing right and do more of it.
That’s why I aim to help clinicians focus on high-impact skills, and ways to address skills from multiple angles:
From very structured situations that isolate skills, to highly functional situations that require kids to integrate many skills at once.
(which is what they’ll have to do in the “real world”).
I recently got some great questions from readers about how to do this with syntax skills. Syntax is definitely one of those “high-impact” skills; but the key to making it functional is teaching it in a way that allows kids to learn new language patterns AND develop the internal dialogue needed to learn new words and sentence structures independently.
In this episode, I share how to do that.
You can listen to the entire episode here:
I’m talking about this topic because it inspired me to create the system I teach in my online course that teaches pediatric SLPs a system for boosting comprehension and processing, Language Therapy Advance Foundations.
I’m doing some extra live Q & A sessions in the members group and also opening up some 1:1 consult availability for members in July 2022, so if you’ve been on the fence about joining, now’s the perfect time to take the leap. If you’re an SLP who wants to learn a framework that will allow you to streamline your therapy so you can show up to sessions confident you’re giving your students the skills they need to thrive, check out our enrollment page and learn more about how to become a member here.