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The Preschool SLP: KellyVessSLP

Podcast de Kelly Vess, MA, CCC-SLP

inglés

Cultura y ocio

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Get ready for all things speech pathology: AAC, ADHD, Apraxia, Articulation Therapy, Autism, Behavior, Early Intervention, Executive Function, Evidence-Based Practice, Gestalt Language, Literacy Intervention, Movement, Multi-Modal Cueing, Narratives, Partnerships, Phonological Awareness, Sensory, Speech Strategies, Target Selection, Technology, Telehealth, and Self-care. Be better. Do better. Create better. Make the world a better place, one person at a time. You're first. Join Kelly every Thursday and at the drawing board. Do better with easy step-by-step 'how-to's' with ready-for-use printables and over 100 video clips of best practices, check out Kelly's book "Speech Sound Disorders: Comprehensive Evaluation and Treatment." It is available at Amazon and major booksellers internationally. If you learn from doing and work with children with special needs, join Kelly's Sparkle in School Membership. Make intervention EASY with weekly ready-for-use materials and Google Slides Decks sent to your inbox. Check it out today at kellyvess.com. Thoughts to share? Email: Kelly@KellyVess.com

Todos los episodios

219 episodios

Portada del episodio 218. Stop Winging Consonant Cluster Targets: Apply the Evidence-Based Complexity Approach

218. Stop Winging Consonant Cluster Targets: Apply the Evidence-Based Complexity Approach

Are you winging it when it comes to picking consonant clusters? If you're spending more time hunting for the right targets than actually running therapy, this episode is your reset button. In today's episode, we're diving deep into selecting consonant clusters. We're breaking down how to select targets strategically, sequence them with intention, and finally see the carryover you've been waiting for. Whether you're a seasoned SLP or new to building your clinical confidence, you'll walk away with a clearer framework and a fresh perspective on why some clients plateau and exactly how to get them moving again. In this episode, we cover: 1) Why random target selection is quietly sabotaging your data 2) The developmental and phonological principles that should be driving your cluster choices 3) How to align targets with your client's unique error patterns for faster progress 4) What the research actually says about cluster intervention sequences Ready to stop searching and start treating? Join the SIS Membership and get done-for-you consonant cluster targets you can put to use today. No more building from scratch, no more second-guessing, just clinically sound, ready-to-use materials designed specifically for SLPs and SLPAs. Join now at kellyvess.com/sis Don't delay and have a summer of reorganizing the brain today.

Ayer - 17 min
Portada del episodio 217. Do You Dare Disturb the Universe? The Asthma & Speech Sound Disorder Connection Nobody's Talking About

217. Do You Dare Disturb the Universe? The Asthma & Speech Sound Disorder Connection Nobody's Talking About

You're welcome. Because today, we're digging into something I bet you're seeing on your back porch right now, and nobody is talking about it. Asthma and speech sound disorders. If you have a child on your caseload with significant asthma, this episode is the one you need tomorrow. Roll up your sleeves with me. We're going to get our hands really, really dirty, and we're going to talk about where the research stops and where the practitioner begins. Because this is where you have to have skin in the game. This is where it matters that you know your little professors closely, that you study what's happening under your own magnifying glass. Here's what we cover: What the research tells us. A Northwestern-led study of 337,285 children found that asthma, hay fever, and food allergy are significantly associated with speech disorders, and the more severe the disease, the greater the risk (Strom & Silverberg, 2016, Pediatric Allergy and Immunology). A 2006 population-based study of 7,389 eight-year-old children identified asthma as one of the factors associated with voice disorders (Carding et al., 2006, Journal of Voice). So we know there is a connection. And that is where the research stops. What I'm seeing on my back porch. This is where things get gnarly. The children with significant asthma are breaking the rules of speech development. They're stopping fricatives, they're fronting velars, they're voicing voiceless sounds, and they're deleting the /h/. Looks like phonological processes, right? Except phonological processes happen across positions of words. What I'm seeing with these kiddos is 0% accuracy in the initial position of words and 100% accuracy in the medial and final positions. That is not linguistic. Do you dare disturb the universe? Yes, you do. That's physiology. Why this is happening. My hypothesis, and this is practitioner experience, not research on large populations, is that these children have insufficient subglottal air pressure. Continuant sounds need continuous airflow from the respiratory system. After the vowel gets going, the vocal folds are doing the work and producing those sounds becomes easy. But in the initial position of words, when you're starting cold, you don't have that help. So fricatives stop, velars front, voiceless sounds get voiced, and the /h/ gets deleted. What the child is telling you. Mouth breathing at rest. Chin jutting. Head forward to get more air in. Tense neck and visible effort while speaking, like they're yelling at conversational volume. Fluctuating accuracy that tracks with allergy season and asthma flare-ups. The clear boogers come out and suddenly the phonological processes you thought were suppressed come right back. That is not a child regressing. That is a child without the respiratory support to do the work in initial position. What to do differently (DSD). You've been doing best practice. You're doing the complexity approach, you're doing DTTC, you're doing multimodal cueing, you're holding the 80% challenge point. And you're still at 0% in initial position. So we're going to do something different. We're going to capitalize on what the child can do. They can produce these sounds after a vowel, so we anchor with a vowel. We say "a sun, a sun." Or we use the end of one word to start the next, "yes sun, yes sun." And then over time, we stretch the pause longer and longer until that target is sitting in the initial position of the word on its own. That is how we DSD. This is one to take notes on. And if you have one of these kiddos on your back porch right now, shoot me an email. This is exactly the kind of clinical pattern I want to research next. 🌟 Join the SIS Membership Today If you learn from doing, and you want highly effective, engaging therapy materials ready to go without the prep, the Sparkle in School Membership was built for you. Educationally rich activities, 100% planned, prepped, and delivered to your inbox every Friday. So your energy goes into cueing the child in front of you, not building materials at midnight. 👉 Join today at kellyvess.com/sis 📘 For the deeper dive, grab Speech Sound Disorders: Comprehensive Evaluation and Treatment on Amazon, with 100+ video clips of best practices illustrated. 📧 Got a kiddo with asthma who's daring to disturb the universe on your back porch? Email me at Kelly@KellyVess.com. I want to hear about it. Be better. Do better. Create better. Make the world a better place, one child at a time. You will always be first. 📚 Research Cited Strom, M. A., & Silverberg, J. I. (2016). Asthma, hay fever, and food allergy are associated with caregiver-reported speech disorders in US children. Pediatric Allergy and Immunology, 27(6), 604–611. doi:10.1111/pai.12580. Pooled analysis of 337,285 U.S. children from 19 population-based cohorts (NHIS 1997–2013 and NSCH 2003/4 and 2007/8). Carding, P. N., Roulstone, S., Northstone, K., & ALSPAC Study Team. (2006). The prevalence of childhood dysphonia: A cross-sectional study. Journal of Voice, 20(4), 623–630. Cohort of 7,389 eight-year-old British children, with asthma identified among the factors associated with increased risk of voice disorders. Tags: speech sound disorders SSD pediatric speech therapy preschool SLP asthma and speech respiratory support subglottal pressure phonological processes stopping fronting voicing errors glottal fricative initial position of words articulation therapy evidence-based practice DTTC complexity approach multimodal cueing physiological speech disorders differential diagnosis do something different DSD Kelly Vess KellyVessSLP The Preschool SLP SIS Membership Sparkle in School SLP podcast speech-language pathology early intervention school SLP

21 de may de 2026 - 29 min
Portada del episodio 216. Bilingual Kids on Your Caseload? The 5-Step 'Good Enough' Plan When You Don't Speak Their Language

216. Bilingual Kids on Your Caseload? The 5-Step 'Good Enough' Plan When You Don't Speak Their Language

You opened your caseload. Another Spanish-speaking kiddo. You don't speak Spanish. There's no translator. No bilingual SLP down the hall. Now what? You don't freeze. You don't refer out. You don't waste a single therapy minute. You use the 5-step Good Enough Practice plan, built on the complexity approach research, to drive real, generalizable gains in both languages, even when you're only treating in one. In this follow-up to Episode 215 (assessment), we roll up our sleeves and walk through exactly what to do Monday morning. 🔥 What You'll Walk Away With ✅ Why "good enough practice" beats "no practice," and how to defend your why on every clinical decision ✅ The exact target selection sequence that gets you the most generalization per minute of therapy ✅ Why FR will get you FL "for free," and why SKR might out-perform both ✅ How to coach caregivers in 5 minutes a day (and why frequency beats duration at the preschool level) ✅ The single word probe strategy that tells you whether gains are generalizing, not just memorized ✅ The one thing more important than language matching: multimodal, dynamic cueing at the 80% challenge point 🎯 The 5-Step "Good Enough" Framework Step 1. Find an error that occurs in BOTH languages. Use IPA to compare error sounds across the child's L1 and English. Pick a sound that's broken in both phonological systems so any gain transfers across languages. The research on shared targets supports this. When shared sounds are treated, cross-linguistic generalization happens, even when treatment is delivered in only one language (Barlow et al., 2024; Gildersleeve-Neumann & Goldstein, 2015). Step 2. Pick a COMPLEX target, not a singleton. Skip /f/ alone. Skip /r/ alone. Go for the cluster. Complex targets create system-wide change because clusters imply singletons, meaning treating the harder thing makes the easier things come along for the ride (Gierut, 2007; Storkel, 2018). Higher aim, higher gains. Cirque du Soleil in the mouth. Step 3. Treat in the language YOU are fluent in (English). You cannot deliver therapy with fidelity in a language you don't speak. A ChatGPT word list doesn't fix your inability to model a Spanish trill. Stick with English, and select complex targets that share sounds with the child's L1 so the gains cross over. Pilot data on Spanish/English bilinguals show medium effect sizes for system-wide generalization in both the treated and untreated language when complex cluster targets are used (Combiths et al., 2023). Step 4. Train caregivers with daily home practice in the child's L1. Build a short core vocabulary list, sentence, or paragraph that contains the target and hand it to the family in their language. Embed it into an existing routine like toothbrushing, bedtime, or snack. Frequency over duration: 5 minutes every day beats 2 hours once a week at the preschool level. Step 5. Probe progress in BOTH languages every quarter. Skip the practice-effect probes for the same 5 words. Re-administer a single-word, phonetically balanced picture test in each language every 2 months and track the number of errors, not the standard scores. That's how you know gains are generalizing rather than rehearsed. 👉 Ready to Stop Hunting for Materials and Start Driving Real Gains? Here's the secret the 5-step plan can't give you on its own: the materials. Inside the SIS Membership, you get the done-for-you complex cluster paragraphs, phonetically loaded sentences. These are the exact materials I hand to caregivers to embed into toothbrushing, bedtime, and snack routines. No more scrambling. No more wondering if your target is complex enough. Join SIS and work smarter, not harder: https://kellyvess.com/sis

14 de may de 2026 - 22 min
Portada del episodio 215. Bilingual Spanish Speech Assessment for $0: The 8-Step Gold Standard Every SLP Needs

215. Bilingual Spanish Speech Assessment for $0: The 8-Step Gold Standard Every SLP Needs

Have zero dollars in your therapy closet for bilingual Spanish assessments? You are not alone — and you are not stuck. In this episode, I walk you through the 8-step gold-standard process for assessing bilingual Spanish-English preschoolers for speech sound disorders, every single step backed by free, vetted, research-supported tools. This is the same framework recommended by Sharynne McLeod, Sarah Verdon, and the International Expert Panel on Multilingual Children's Speech (McLeod, Verdon, & IEPMCS, 2017, AJSLP) — taught to you in plain English with direct links you can click today. You'll learn how to: Capture a true language profile Sample BOTH languages without overdiagnosing dialect features Use narrow IPA transcription so you don't mislabel allophones as errors Distinguish a transfer error from a true speech sound disorder Free Resources Mentioned Step 1 — Language Profile Alberta Language Environment Questionnaire (ALEQ/ALDeQ) + Intelligibility in Context Scale: https://www.ualberta.ca/en/linguistics/cheslcentre/questionnaires.html Intelligibility in Context Scale: https://www.csu.edu.au/research/multilingual-speech/speech-assessments/ics Step 2 — Sampling Both Languages UBC Cross-Linguistic Phonological Development Project (single-word probes in many languages): https://phonodevelopment.sites.olt.ubc.ca/ Frog, Where Are You: https://www.iifilologicas.unam.mx/uploads/IL-2-Lecturas/050-Frog_Story_all_as_pdf_image_300.pdf Step 3 — Narrow IPA Transcription ASHA Spanish Phonemic Inventory: https://www.asha.org/siteassets/uploadedfiles/spanish-phonemic-inventory.pdf Step 4 — Parent Baseline Recording Speech Accent Archive (cross-dialect reference recordings): https://accent.gmu.edu/ Step 5 — Independent Then Relational Analysis Phon software (open-source phonological analysis): https://www.phon.ca/ Step 6 — Rule Out Transfer & Dialect Bilinguistics Spanish-English Articulation Norms Chart: https://bilinguistics.com/articulation-norms-for-spanish-and-english/ Step 7 — Diagnose Only If Errors Appear in BOTH Languages Goldstein & Fabiano (2007) ASHA Leader: https://leader.pubs.asha.org/doi/10.1044/leader.FTR2.12022007.6 Step 8 — Treat with Complex Targets UBC Fun-ology Activities: https://phonodevelopment.sites.olt.ubc.ca/activities-2/activities/ Reference: McLeod, S., Verdon, S., & International Expert Panel on Multilingual Children's Speech (2017). Tutorial: Speech assessment for multilingual children who do not speak the same language(s) as the speech-language pathologist. American Journal of Speech-Language Pathology, 26(3), 691–708. Ready to Optimize Change with Complex Targets? Join the SIS (Speech It Smarter) Membership to learn how to select, sequence, and track complex treatment targets — including three-element /s/ clusters, /fr/ and /fl/ clusters. Join the SIS Membership: https://www.kellyvess.com/sis

10 de may de 2026 - 19 min
Portada del episodio 214. Why Speech Therapy Falls Apart for Kids with ADHD+Anxiety (And How to Fix It)

214. Why Speech Therapy Falls Apart for Kids with ADHD+Anxiety (And How to Fix It)

If you’re feeling like your therapy sessions are “working” but chugging along at a slow pace, this episode is going to hit a nerve in the best way. Because here’s the truth that most of us weren’t trained to see clearly: When a child has anxiety or ADHD, you are not just treating speech and language. You are working against a nervous system that is dysregulated, overloaded, and constantly scanning for what feels safe, predictable, and doable. And if your therapy doesn’t account for that, it won’t stick. Not because the child can’t learn, but because the system isn’t ready to hold onto what you’re teaching. In this episode, we break down what is actually happening underneath the surface with anxiety and ADHD, and why traditional, sit-and-work therapy models often fall apart with these learners. We walk through what to look for, what to shift immediately, and how to build sessions that regulate first so language, speech, and AAC can actually follow. We’re talking about real, Monday-morning changes that increase engagement, reduce shutdown behaviors, and create the kind of momentum that leads to true generalization. If you’ve ever thought, “They can do it with me, but nowhere else,” this episode is for you. Because that gap is not a mystery. It’s a systems problem, and you can fix it. And when you do, everything changes. If you are ready for therapy that actually works for children with anxiety and ADHD, where movement, regulation, literacy, and communication are all working together instead of competing, then it’s time to step into a model that was built for exactly that. Inside the SIS Membership, you get ready-to-use, literacy-based, movement-rich therapy activities designed to support regulation, attention, and engagement first, so that speech, language, and AAC gains can finally stick and generalize across settings. No more piecing things together. No more guessing what will work. Just open, implement, and watch the shift. Join the SIS Membership here: https://www.kellyvess.com/sis Roll up your sleeves and meet me at the intervention drawing board.💚KellyVessSLP

30 de abr de 2026 - 23 min
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
Soy muy de podcasts. Mientras hago la cama, mientras recojo la casa, mientras trabajo… Y en Podimo encuentro podcast que me encantan. De emprendimiento, de salid, de humor… De lo que quiera! Estoy encantada 👍
MI TOC es feliz, que maravilla. Ordenador, limpio, sugerencias de categorías nuevas a explorar!!!
Me suscribi con los 14 días de prueba para escuchar el Podcast de Misterios Cotidianos, pero al final me quedo mas tiempo porque hacia tiempo que no me reía tanto. Tiene Podcast muy buenos y la aplicación funciona bien.
App ligera, eficiente, encuentras rápido tus podcast favoritos. Diseño sencillo y bonito. me gustó.
contenidos frescos e inteligentes
La App va francamente bien y el precio me parece muy justo para pagar a gente que nos da horas y horas de contenido. Espero poder seguir usándola asiduamente.

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