prevention of stuttering

From: Jessica Schneider
Date: 10/4/99
Time: 11:35:47 PM
Remote Name: 209.105.54.105

Comments

The ongoing project in Denmark has some very worthy goals. It is mentioned in the report that for the last
decade, intervention toward young children has focused on the prevention of stuttering. My question is, what
are the methods used to do this? What kinds of things are the speech therapists using to prevent stuttering?

Re: prevention of stuttering

From: Hermann
Date: 10/5/99
Time: 1:42:38 AM
Remote Name: 194.255.2.112

Comments

Hi Jessica, 

Mainly the speech therapists are using parent counseling. In the more severe cases where counseling does not
suffice, the children are referred to more direct treatment working with the stuttering symptoms as well as
couseling. In Denmark the therapeutic approach working with stuttering in young children is inspired by ao.
Carl Dell and Woody Starkweather. 

But many speech therapists are still afraid of working with school age children. The main reason being not
feeling qualified for that work. 

Regards Hermann

Re: prevention of stuttering

From: Re prevention
Date: 10/5/99
Time: 1:58:55 AM
Remote Name: 194.255.2.112

Comments

Jessica, 

Perhaps I should add, that the term "prevention" is used in the sense to ameliorate the stuttering and/or prevent
stuttering from becoming a life-long social handicap. The stuttering in itself is not "prevented" (since it is
already present), but the ramifications are - hopefully - prevented (and many speech therapists claim that they
do not any longer meet those very severe school age stutterers they met a decade or two ago - this is a
controversial issue though: other speech therapists claim that they are there, but they are typically covert
stutterers, and you are not skilled enough to find them). 

Regards Hermann

Diagnoses in the school classroom

From: Les Anderson
Date: 10/5/99
Time: 11:08:40 AM
Remote Name: 209.52.196.4

Comments

Mr. Christmann, 

There is another very important problem with early intervention that you failed to touch upon in your paper.
The child in classroom who is just beginning school and who is showing the early signs of stuttering. The
university teacher's curriculum does not teach anything to teachers about recognizing the onsets or the early
signals of a child who is starting to stuttering. Many children have been misdiagnosed by a teacher as just
being shy, not paying attention so cannot verbally answer questions, is a slow learner or is a loner because the
child avoids contact with other children. I have heard of cases were children who stuttered have been put into
special classes because it was thought that the child had a learning disability. I think we all recognize the
school classroom or playground can be devastating place for a child who stutters How would you propose that
a child receives the proper diagnoses in situations as mentioned above? This is a critical age for children who
stutter to receive attention for their speech difficulties, but if the teacher has no idea what these tell tale signals,
who refers these children to the school's SLPs? 

Les Anderson 

Re: Diagnoses in the school classroom

From: Hermann Christmann
Date: 10/7/99
Time: 10:18:23 AM
Remote Name: 194.255.2.112

Comments

Les, I think we have met. I attended the ISTAR clinic in Edmonton in July 1992, where you came and
addressed us, during a lunch break as far as I recall. 

Although I did not address the role of the school teacher in my paper, I, and other parties are fully aware of
that problem. In our country, teachers don't get any education in stuttering, and this is indeed a black spot.
Quite often I meet teachers who have taught for decades, who tell me they have never had a stuttering student
in any of their many classes during those decades! My personal opinion is that there are many, and more than
you would suppose, students in school who are very "clever" at hiding their stuttering, and their teachers have
no idea at all that they stutter. In The Stuttering Association we are working on having "handicap", including
stuttering, as a part of the curriculum for teachers. In the meantime we can try and inform teachers and we can
encourage speech therapists to inform teachers about stuttering and its many subtle representations. 

Thank you for responding. 

Warm regards Hermann 

prevention of stuttering

From: Jessica Schneider
Date: 10/5/99
Time: 7:23:54 PM
Remote Name: 209.32.248.92

Comments

Thank you for taking the time to answer my question. Your explanation and clarification of "prevention" was
very helpful.

Re: prevention of stuttering

From: Hermann
Date: 10/7/99
Time: 10:22:58 AM
Remote Name: 194.255.2.112

Comments

Jessica, 

You may look into Starkweather et al. Stuttering Prevention, a clinical method. Englewood Cliffs. Prentice
Hall. 1990. As far as I remember they have a discussion there on different types af prevention. 

Hermann

Re: prevention of stuttering

From: Woody Starkweather
Date: 10/21/99
Time: 3:44:13 PM
Remote Name: 155.247.229.221

Comments

Hi Everyone: 

There is indeed such a discussion in our book, but we simply adopted the definition of prevention given by the
American Speech-Language-Hearing Association, which is that there are three levels of prevention -- primary
prevention, which prevents a problem develop in the first place, secondary prevention, in which a disorder is
recognized in its earliest stages and is prevented from becoming a chronic condition, and tertiary prevention,
which prevents and existing problem from becoming worse. Our stuttering prevention program is aimed at
secondary and tertiary prevention. 

Woody

Re: prevention of stuttering

From: Hermann Christmann
Date: 10/22/99
Time: 3:14:35 AM
Remote Name: 194.255.2.112

Comments

Hi Woody, 

Thank you for the elaboration. 

Hermann 

parent groups

From: Brenda Natala
Date: 10/20/99
Time: 3:40:20 PM
Remote Name: 206.131.108.2

Comments

Why do you think parent groups are difficult to sustain? With parents of young children, and parents of
children who are mild stutterers, I have felt that perhaps the parents are reluctant to identify their child as a
stutterer. They hope that stuttering will go away through maturation or therapy, therefore, they are not ready to
see their child labelled as a serious stutterer that necessitates attending support groups. Here in the US, parents
are very busy and under alot of stress with careers, sports, and music lessons, etc. That may also contribute. I
am impressed by your intervention program and feel you are way ahead of us here in Minnesota. We who
work in the schools have high caseloads and lack the specialized expertise on fluency. There is also a shortage
of private practitioners who specialize in fluency. Keep up the good work! I look forward to hearing your
results next year at ISAD 3. 

Re: parent groups

From: Hermann Christmann
Date: 10/22/99
Time: 3:27:55 AM
Remote Name: 194.255.2.112

Comments

Brenda, 

Why parent groups are difficult to sustain - is indeed the 64.000 dollar question. 

I have no clear explanation, only some tentative contemplations. As you mentioned, parents often hope, that
their child will outgrow the stuttering, especially as it often is very variable in youngsters. Further, entering
into a group requires an active decision - may be a threshold to many. Interests are divided, some parents
focus only on their own child and its needs, others are more prone to do a more outgoing or "political" job
working for better services in the field etc. Many need som kind of initial "push" to be engaged in a group.
That could be a parent group established as an integrated part of the therapy. I have the impression, that those
groups established in connection to a treatment are the most stable, although they also tend to evaporate after a
certan time. 

Hermann 

Re: parent groups

From: Hermann Christmann
Date: 10/22/99
Time: 3:42:54 AM
Remote Name: 194.255.2.112

Comments

Brenda, 

I forgot to comment on the rest of your letter. 

What you tell about the schools and the therapists in Minnesota...well, it could be translated directly into
Danish and it would perfectly describe the state here in Denmark. That is one of the reasons for initiating the
project. 

Hermann 

Comment on Intervention

From: Lynn K. Bender
Date: 10/21/99
Time: 4:28:10 PM
Remote Name: 136.234.50.67

Comments

I commend you for the undertaking of such a project. I have always been a proponent of early intervetion. I
look forward to what type of results you achieve in the coming years. Good Luck!! 

Re: Comment on Intervention

From: Hermann Christmann
Date: 10/22/99
Time: 3:29:11 AM
Remote Name: 194.255.2.112

Comments

Lynn, 

Thank you very much. 

Hermann