Successful Communication: Realistic Outcomes for Adults Who Stutter Successful Communication: Realistic Outcomes for Adults Who Stutter NSA Nashville,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Making Healthy Decisions
Advertisements

Time Pressure!!! Dont Put up with It!!!! D. Games & kids… D. Games & kids…
Stuttering By: Stephanie Boggs. About stuttering 1% of the world stutters. 1% of the world stutters. It’s ok to stutter. It’s ok to stutter. What happens.
True colors Better understanding of your personality, communication preferences, and how it affects interactions with your core!
Counseling techniques are used to help clients understand their communication disabilities and discover ways to adjust and cope with them Blood, 1995.
Dealing with Conflict Presented by Maureen McConnell CHAOS Networker.
Freedom of Fluency By David A. Daly.
Examples of life goals: 1.Live on my own or with a family of my own. If I have this, I can use my non-working time how I see fit. FREE TIME! 2.Keep a job.
Expressing Emotions and Dealing with Stress Every girl wants a dream guy. Be that dream, in fact exceed that dream. Cassidy Ralph Pd. 4.
De-Stress – Not Distress Eric Medcalf University of Glasgow Counselling and Psychological Services.
Understanding Emotions
Fluency Treatment for Big Kids Lynne Shields Fontbonne University Department of Communication Disorders & Deaf Education.
Treatment of Chronic Stuttering: Realistic Outcomes for Long Term Change ASHA Chicago, Illinois November 14, 2003 Stephen B. Hood, Ph. D. University of.
Knowledge of when/where you may come face-to-face with Parents and need to provide them with answers regarding their child’s education Understanding the.
Reality Therapy: CHOICE THEORY
Ships in Service Training Material A-M CHAUVEL 2009.
1 FUNDED BY AARP ANDRUS FOUNDATION Institute of Gerontology.
Theory and Practice of Counseling and Psychotherapy
15 Simple Habits of The Happiest People.
Thinking Actively in a Social Context T A S C.
Understanding Mental and Emotional Health
Northern Metropolitan Region Achievement Improvement Zones.
Coaches With Clients presents...
Use communication skills to influence others..  Persuasion is an important part of communication  Want others to understand your message and agree with.
Charles Van Riper’s “Stuttering Modification Therapy”
How conversation works Conversational English Compiled by Victor Nickolz Grand Lyceum 2004 For classes 7-11.
4 Basic Qualities of a Healthy Relationship
Promoting Social Emotional Competence
CBI Health Group Staff Education Sessions Social and Cultural Sensitivity.
PEARL The Manchester College
Discover Yourself Chapter One Coach Thompson Chapter One Coach Thompson.
Beyond the Visible: Helping Students to Look Beyond the Disfluency ASHA -- SID 4 Leadership Conference Leadership Conference May 18, 2001 Toronto Stephen.
10/17/20151 Introduction to Health and Wellness 2 Health: A state of total physical, mental, and social well-being (not just freedom from sickness or.
Peer Pressure 8 th Grade Health Mr. De Oliveira. What is Peer Pressure? Pressure from one’s peers to behave in a manner similar or acceptable to them.
Critical Review of The Successful Stuttering Management Program (SSMP) An Overview by: Casey Petersen & Brigitta Dahnert.
Stuttering Modification Therapy
Helping Children Develop Healthy Attitudes Toward Stuttering J. Scott Yaruss, Ph.D. Stuttering Center of Western Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh.
Stuttering and Fluency 1 Stuttering Definitions What is stuttering? What causes stuttering? Development of stuttering Factors which contribute to stuttering.
Some Tools For Team Building an Introduction 2010 Faith and Light International Formation Project Team.
Covert Stuttering Cathy Olish Matt Murtha Patrice Roy Adrian McAdory Gary J. Rentschler 2010 NSA Conference Cleveland, OH Exposed!
Communication skills Test. You can judge your communication skills by answering strongly agree, agree, neutral, disagree or strongly disagree.
Some Tools For Team Building Faith and Light International Formation 2010.
Freedom of Fluency. Freedom of Fluency, Daly Components –1. Motor Skill Training Deliberate Phonation (humming) Normal Breath Easy Stretch (prolongations.
The Freedom of Fluency By: David A. Daly Presented by: Katie Paulson And Rachel Ursin 1988, Lingui Systems, Inc.
Stuttering Modification Therapy The Van Riper Approach
Successful Communication: Realistic Outcomes for Adults Who Stutter Successful Communication: Realistic Outcomes for Adults Who Stutter NSAMinneapolis.
Phonics, speaking and listening, learning and challenge!
Making Healthful Choices Building Health Skills Chapter 2 – Lesson 1.
What Is Stuttering Stuttering is a speech disorder in which the normal flow of speech is disrupted by frequent repetitions or prolongations of speech.
Helping Children Develop Healthy Attitudes Toward Stuttering J. Scott Yaruss, Ph.D. Stuttering Center of Western Pennsylvania University of Pittsburgh.
Leadership By: Nick Meress. What is a leader? Being a leader comes from how you were born and raised. It doesn’t mean you might be the president of the.
Self-Esteem Health Miss Kilker. What is Self-Esteem? Self-Esteem: is a measure of how much you value, respect, and feel confident about yourself.
Problem Solving, Decision Making, Negotiation and Compromise
Bringing Out the Best in Each Child Quality Parenting and Mutual Respect.
Interpersonal communication. defining the process of message transaction between people to create and sustain shared meaning.
Mrs. Farver.  Mental Health – reflects a person’s ability to cope with the daily demands of life (i.e. deal with stress), have a positive self-concept,
STUTTERING. WARNING SIGNS FIRST THREE INDICATORS-disturbance in speech production -Multiple repetitions, especially parts of words or first syllables.
A Systematic Approach to Group Facilitation Part I: Understanding Adaptive Behaviors The Source of Critical Incidents.
Why it matters  Your essay reveals something important about you that your grades and test scores can't—your personality.  It can give admission officers.
Supporting Children with Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCN) Monday 21 st March Emily Alderson – Speech and Language Therapist.
Your Thoughts Objectives: * Understand that we are responsible for our own thoughts. * Define and understand the concept of automatic thoughts.
Verbal listening: Listening.
Stuttering and Self Esteem
Bobby wan Delivering Memorable Presentations Tell Stories
General Treatment Approaches to Change Speech/Stuttering Behaviors
Ways to Manage Stress Aim: How can we examine ways to cope with stress and distinguish between positive and negative reactions?
Stuttering Presentation
“Let’s Talk” Lesson 10.
Indicators of Successful Change
Psychosocial Support for Young Men
Presentation transcript:

Successful Communication: Realistic Outcomes for Adults Who Stutter Successful Communication: Realistic Outcomes for Adults Who Stutter NSA Nashville, TN June, 2003 Facilitator: Stephen B. Hood, Ph. D. Stephen B. Hood, Ph. D. Proud NSA Member Since 1978

Sheehan’s Iceberg of Stuttering Core Features Repetitions Prolongations Blockages Secondary Features Escape Avoidance Attitudes & Feelings Fear Guilt Shame Denial

Behavioral and Emotional Dimensions

Time Sequencing of Events

Explore Your Options b Components Attitudes Feelings Behaviors –Avoidance –Stuttering –Escape b Goals/objectives Spontaneous Fluency Controlled Fluency Managed Stuttering b Effective communication Look For C lues Study Your Options

: for Adults for Whom Stuttering Has Become Chronic and Severe Realistic Outcomes: for Adults for Whom Stuttering Has Become Chronic and Severe b To be able to talk any time, any place and to any body--- b And to be able to communicate effectively and efficiently--- b And to be able to do so with little more than a normal amount of negative emotion.

Ideas From the Internet Along With Other Sources è I no longer need to chase the “fluency god.” è I can live without constant fear. è I can speak well without scanning ahead for difficult words. è I can speak for myself, rather than rely on others. è I can explore and follow career opportunities that require talking. è I can make decisions in spite of stuttering, not because of it. è I am not suffering or handicapped because of my stuttering. è I accept myself. è I don’t feel guilty when I stutter, and I am not ashamed of myself for when I do sometimes stutter. è I have choices I can make that help me talk easily. è I communicate effectively, and feel comfortable doing so. è “I’m really an o-k person” -- and I like being me.

Crucial Experiences: (from Van Riper and Czuchna)  Stuttering can be deliberately endured, touched, maintained and studied.  Avoidance only increases fear, and must be reduced.  Struggled, hurried escapes and recoils from stuttering make it worse than it needs to be.  It is possible to build barriers to destructive listener reactions.  Society in general rewards the person who obviously confronts and attempts to deal positively and constructively with stuttering.  Every effort must be made to build up your ego-strength, self-confidence and self-respect.  When the moment of stuttering occurs it can be studied, and its evil effects erased as much as possible.  It is personally more rewarding to stutter easily and stutter fluently than to stutter severely, and it is fun to be able to talk anywhere, even though you do stutter.

Ways to Talk Easily -- (Which Implies helpful prerequisite attitudes) Post-It Notes AVMAir-Voice-Movement KYMRKeep-Your-Motor-Running RTSERemember-to-Start-Easily NNTHNo-Need-to-Hurry Speech Rate -vs- Articulation Rate “Slow it down -- to speed it up” “Gearing down and gearing up” Speeding Tickets (car) -vs- Talking Tickets (mouth) Dealing With Time Pressure

Ways to Talk Easily -- (Which Implies helpful prerequisite attitudes) ê Easy Onsets ê Light Articulatory Contacts ê Reduced “articulation rate” ê Cancellations (If you are brave enough) ê “Freezing” -- holding on, then releasing gradually ê Pull-Outs ê Releases from stuttering moments must be easy, gradual and voiced ê Proprioceptive Monitoring ê Preparatory Sets

Ways to Talk Easily -- (which implies helpful prerequisite attitudes) Self Talk Positive and Negative The Use of Language: action oriented verbs “What Happened” -vs- “What am I doing” “Having a block” and “Getting Stuck” “Little men are fighting in my throat” Nowness Superstitious Behaviors Safety Margins Adjustment to easy talking and fluency. No more secondary gains Openness:Advertising Voluntary Stuttering, Pseudo-Stuttering

Socially acceptable ways to acknowledge acceptance of stuttering to your listeners If someone asks you if you have any hobbies and interests, you can answer by saying: If someone asks you if you have any hobbies and interests, you can answer by saying: “One of my hobbies is stuttering. I’ve been practicing, and am getting pretty good at it.”“One of my hobbies is stuttering. I’ve been practicing, and am getting pretty good at it.” If someone asks you if you stutter, you can say: If someone asks you if you stutter, you can say: “Yes, I sometimes stutter. As a matter of fact, I am actually getting to be pretty good at it.“Yes, I sometimes stutter. As a matter of fact, I am actually getting to be pretty good at it. If someone asks you if you have stuttered all your live, answer by saying: If someone asks you if you have stuttered all your live, answer by saying: “Not Yet.” “Not Yet.”

Socially acceptable ways to acknowledge acceptance of stuttering to your listeners If someone comments on your stuttering, you might say “Sure I stutter. What are you good at?”“Sure I stutter. What are you good at?” “Sure I stutter. Want me to teach you how to do it?“Sure I stutter. Want me to teach you how to do it? “Stuttering is ok, because what I say is worth repeating.“Stuttering is ok, because what I say is worth repeating. “Stuttering is ok, and I have permission to do it.”“Stuttering is ok, and I have permission to do it.” (Now: Try to come up with some of your own )

Hood’s Hopefully Helpful Hints 4 Although you may not have a choice as to WHETHER you stutter, you have a choice as to how you stutter. 4 Attempting to hide, repress, conceal, avoid stuttering makes it worse than it needs to be. 4 Stuttering is something you do, not something that happens to you. 4 The things that may have originally caused stuttering are not the same as the things that influenced its development -- and are not the same as the things that are now serving to maintain the problem. 4 Fluency is more than the absence of stuttering. 4 It is important to understand the process of talking. 4 The process of desensitization is two fold: both emotional AND behavioral. 4 It is better to do more and more things to talk easily, than more and more things to try not to stutter.

Preferred Client Outcomes ASHA - SID - 4: Draft 1. I am satisfied with my therapy and its Outcome. 2. I have increased my ability to communicate effectively. 3. I feel comfortable as a speaker. 4. I like the way I sound. 5. I feel I have an increased sense of control over my speech, including stuttering. 6. My speaking skills have become more automatic. 7. I have an increased ability to cope with variability of stuttering, including relapse. 8. I am better able to reach social/education/vocational potential and goals. 9. My knowledge of self-help/support groups has increased.

Final Outcomes from Therapy: Goals, Options and Choices