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Stop Stuttering With Speech Therapy

Posted by Kyle Madison on April 1, 2009

stop stutteringThere are different techniques used to help someone stop stuttering.  Such techniques are a mix of fluency shaping and stuttering modification techniques. Here are some of the commonly used techniques for treating intermediate stuttering.

Flexible Rate

Flexible rate is slowing down the production of a word, especially the first syllable.  This technique is thought to allow more time for language planning and motor execution.  In here, only those syllables on which stuttering is expected are slowed, not the surrounding speech.

Flexible rate is taught by having the clinician model production of words in which the first syllable and the transition to the second syllable are said in a way that slows all of the sounds equally.  Vowels, fricatives, nasals, sibilants, and glides are lengthened, and plosives and affricates are produced to sound more like fricatives, without stopping the sound or airflow.

After the clinician’s model, the child produces the word with flexible rate, and successive approximations of the target are reinforced.

Easy Onsets

Easy onsets refer to an easy or gentle onset of voicing.  Teaching easy onsets is like teaching flexible rate.  The clinician models the target behavior by the use of a lot of different sounds and then he makes the child imitate the models. After the child tries to imitate, the therapist should reinforce the child’s successive approximations.

Some children, particular younger ones, may be helped to get the concept by performing an action, such as bringing their hands together slowly, as they produce an easy onset.

Light Contacts

Producing consonants with light contacts prevents the stoppage of airlow and/ or voicing that can trigger stuttering.  Light contacts are taught by modeling a style of producing consonants with relaxed articulators and continuous flow of air or voice, depending on the consonant.

Plosives and affricates should be slightly distorted so that they sound like fricatives but are still intelligible.  Modeling a variety of words with initial consonants and reinforcing the child’s successive approximations of the target accomplish teaching a child to use light contacts. The clinician can use a variety of games to make the concept of light contact more interesting.

Proprioception

Proprioception refers to sensory feedback from mechanoreceptors in muscles of the lips, jaw, and tongue.  The effectiveness of teaching proprioception may be that it promotes conscious attention to sensory information from the articulators, perhaps bypassing inefficient automatic sensory monitoring systems and thereby normalizing sensory-motor control.

Children can be taught to use proprioception by having a child first hold a raisin in his mouth and report on its taste, shape, size, and other attributes.  Children can also learn proprioception by picking a word from a list and then closing their eyes and silently moving their articulators for this word and being rewarded when the clinician guesses the word.

Children can be coached to feel the movements of their lips, tongue, and jaw as they say a word.  Proprioceptive awareness can also be enhanced by using masking noise or delayed auditory feedback to interfere with self-hearing.  In this, the clinician must look for slightly exaggerated, slow movements to verify that a child is trying to feel the movement of his articulators.

Scaffolding

It is useful with some children to “scaffold” their use of superfluency by letting the listener/s know that we are working on our speech and sometimes by coaching the child in that fluency-friendly environment. This can be exhibited for example telling a stranger in a mall that the child and the clinician are working on their speech and would like to ask him some questions, another example would be when the child makes telephone calls.

These are just a few of the techniques that are available to help someone stop stuttering.  For another great solution go to stop stuttering now.

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The Reasons People Develop a Stutter and How To Stop Stuttering

Posted by Kyle Madison on March 21, 2009

stop stutteringIn my time working with people to help them stop stuttering, I have been asked many times, why certain people develop a stutter. Personally I believe there are many reasons and I am going to share some of them and give examples of why certain people I have helped developed a stutter.

My best friend had a speech impediment, known as a stutter for eighteen years; I could see how it affected him and he felt that it was ruining his life. He developed the stutter and just four years old. After years of research and trying numerous therapies, products, and group session we found the answer. I was able to help my friend overcome the stutter at the age of twenty-two. For more information on the product I found, go to: http://www.stop-stuttering-now.com. I saw what this did to him and because of the pain I saw him go through, I now as a career help other people to achieve fluency. As you can imagine, I have therefore met and helped many people who stutter. When working with someone I do a little research and ask them, how and why in their opinion their stutter started.

Quite a few people are not sure; however other people state the following reasons:

• It was triggered after a traumatic event

• It runs in the family

• They copied a friend at school who had a stutter and then it stuck with them

• An over aggressive relative

• Because they were left handed!

A couple of years ago, I had a female client who told me about how she had developed a stutter. She was able to talk fluently until the age of twenty-four. She then became pregnant for the first time, and was very excited about the prospect of becoming a mom.

The day of the birth arrived and unfortunately the delivery was particularly difficult and very painful. This really shocked and traumatized her; she had never imagined that it could have been that bad. After the birth of the baby, who was a healthy boy, she developed a stutter.

Not all people who stutter have it from an early age; another one of my clients was fluent until the age of nineteen. He then was in a severe car crash and this triggered a stutter in him.

Originally published at:  http://www.goarticles.com/cgi-bin/showa.cgi?C=1459390

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