1 Year
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4 Tips for Using Books to Teach your Toddler Fall Vocabulary
Happy fall, friends! There truly are so many wonderful things about this season. Sweater weather, football, coffee, pumpkin patches…you name it. Every year in my speech room, we do a lot of fall themed activities, books, and games (think: apples, leaves, pumpkins, Halloween, harvest, Thanksgiving, etc.) What’s not to love? This fall, I’ve been really looking forward to doing all the fun fall things with our 17-month-old, who is so much more cognizant of the world around him than he was last fall. We are planning a trip (or multiple trips) to the pumpkin patch, decking our front porch with mums, going on leaf hunts, planning themed Halloween costumes…you get…
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3 Easy Language Activities for your Toddler using Washi Tape
Here’s the deal – as a mom and an SLP, it feels like a big responsibility to make sure I’m including creative language activities in our typical day at home. Specifically my 16 month old (and especially as that 16 month old is adjusting to lots of change with a new baby sister around). As a parent, it can be easy to fall into the trap of thinking you need high end or specific toys to work on language. Sometimes, I have to remind parents of littles I work with that the takeaway is NOT to go out and buy the toys we use in therapy to have at home…
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Hudson’s First Amazon Christmas List
How is it already that time of the year again? And how on earth is my tiny little newborn baby now 7 months and getting ready to celebrate his first Christmas? Over the past year, I’ve been making a mental list of my favorite toys that I’ve used in therapy with littles that I wanted put on my own little guy’s first Christmas list. I have a lot of patients on my caseload who are 3 and under. What do I go for when they come into my room? And more importantly, what do they go for when they come into my room? With kids this little, I think it’s…
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5 Daily Routines to Support your 1-year-old’s Language Skills
I’ll just say it: speech therapy can be overwhelming. If it was a surprise when your child was referred for an evaluation or a surprise when therapy was actually recommended during that evaluation, it can be even more overwhelming. All of a sudden, you have not only committed to another weekly (or multiple times/week) obligation, but you are also most likely expected to participate, and responsible for implementing strategies/helping your little one practice at home. No pressure! Like many SLPs, I believe that part of being a speech therapist is not just working with the child, but also working with the parent (e.g., the patient’s parent). This can mean helping…