Description
This book, the first in an exciting new series, provides speech and language therapy students and newly qualified and beginning stammering specialists with 100 key points that will help form a strong foundation for their work supporting adults and teenagers who stammer.
Composed of practical, relevant and useful advice from an experienced clinician, chapters break advice down into sections which include information about the therapeutic relationship, therapeutic approaches and signposts to further resources. Throughout the book, comments from stammering specialists describe what they wish they had known at the start of their careers.
This book:
- Puts the person who stammers at the heart of therapy, following the clinical choices they might make
- Is written in an accessible style, designed to be dipped in and out of as required
- Draws on the experience of therapists working with those who stammer
Full of advice and guidance to support effective practice, this is an essential resource for anybody new to this client group.
Author: Trudy Stewart
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 06/09/2022
Pages: 244
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.55lbs
Size: 7.81h x 5.06w x 0.53d
ISBN13: 9781032012520
ISBN10: 1032012528
BISAC Categories:
- Education | General
- Health & Fitness | Hearing & Speech
- Psychology | Cognitive Neuroscience & Cognitive Neuropsychology
About the Author
Trudy Stewart is a retired consultant speech and language therapist. She studied in universities in Glasgow, Michigan State (USA) and Leeds. She worked in the UK with children and adults who stammer for nearly 40 years. Her last role was clinical lead of the Stammering Support Centre in Leeds. Trudy has taught undergraduate, graduate and specialist courses for clinicians in the UK, Europe and Sri Lanka, including on the European Clinical Specialisation in Fluency Disorders (ECSF) course. She has carried out research while a clinician, presented her work at international conferences and written several texts on stammering. She recently co-wrote and directed a play about stammering called 'Unspoken.'
This title is not returnable