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Services

Effective speech therapy improves communication and quality of life. Speech therapy improves articulation and problem solving. Speech therapy improves reading and comprehension skills. Additionally, speech therapy gives your child a higher level of language.

What are the benefits of speech therapy? Speech therapy allows your child to communicate their individual wants and needs clearly and effectively. It allows them to maximize their potential both in the home and in the school. You can watch your child become more confident as their ability to express themselves with their families, their peers and their community. 

 

Comprehensive speech and language therapy addresses the needs of the whole child and their family. Each session is catered to your child's individual needs may it be improving their vocabulary or grammar skills, addressing their ability to speak clearly, improving their reading and writing skills, maximizing their ability to process information efficiently, maximizing their social skills, or addressing their nutritional needs through feeding. Most importantly, sessions are personalized to maximize your child's success.

Developmental therapy looks at how a child is developing during the most significant period of development - birth through 5 years. Developmental therapists do not address on specific area but look at a child globally (e.g., cognitive skills, language and communication, social-emotional skills and behavior, gross and fine motor skills and self-help skills. . This is a service that is offered in the Early Intervention Program.

​Speech & Language
  • Comprehensive speech and language evaluation and treatment

  • Individual therapy for children with Autism spectrum disorder, including work in social communication skills

  • Therapy for disorders of fluency including disfluency of fluency

  • Therapy for verbal apraxia and other disorders of articulation

  • Therapy for developmental language disorders

  • Evaluation and treatment of pediatric feeding disorders which may include oral motor delay, difficulty swallowing, behavioral problems, food refusal, poor weight gain, or difficulty with texture transition

Developmental Therapy
  • Asses child's global development 

  • Identify specific areas of need and areas of strength

  • develop play activities designed to help a child overcome challenges and improve the quality of interactions

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