This is Part 5 of my series for SLPs on Childhood Apraxia of Speech: Let's Talk!
Today, we are going to talk about planning your therapy for CAS.
I hope you have a better understanding of how to plan an evaluation for a child whom you suspect has childhood apraxia of speech and a better understanding of how to make your differential diagnosis. I really think that's the hard part! We even learned how to identify emerging skills that will be great starting points in therapy. So now, it's time to get a therapy plan going and get some progress rolling for your student.
If you are just joining in, I recommend reading the earlier posts and then catching up with us here. You can find the first post in this series here: Childhood Apraxia of Speech: What SLPs Need to Know. It's okay, Go ahead. I'll wait!
So let's talk about the principles of motor learning theory and making progress with childhood apraxia of speech.
This is important to your therapy plan, I promise. Let's think about this. We want to improve skills in motor planning, retrieval and carrying out the muscle movements (motor movements) needed for speech. So we need to know what research says is the most efficient way to do that.
Motor learning theory has been applied to the rehabilitation of limb movements for many years, and in the last 10-15 years, to the treatment of CAS.
Some studies have supported it's application to speech movements, others have not. Speech is, after all, a complex behavior, involving language and motor movements. The severity of CAS appears to be a large factor.So what needs to happen to learn a motor skill? We need practice. Lots and lots of repetitive practice of the movement. How did you learn to ride a bike? Steer a car? Did you do this smoothly at first? Probably not, but the more practice you got, the better you were. You practiced until the movements came automatically.
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First things first.
We need a few skills in place to make the most progress. The child needs to be able to imitate you, be willing to watch your face, maintain attention. If these are not in place yet, build these into your therapy plan.Here's how:

2. The child needs to watch your face: Hold activities and reinforcers near your face, not on the table, which encourages the child to look away. Place the child at eye level with you. Raise the child, or lower yourself! Dr. Strand sometimes puts them on top of her desk. I tried that, and it works great. Face to face, with no table in between. Attention is on your face.
3. The child needs to sustain attention on you. Use activities that are motivating, but really quick. Don't let them distract the child's focus. Get back to practice immediately. The more responses per session, the faster the progress!
Now let's talk about what motor learning theory says about scheduling practice.
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How often should therapy sessions be scheduled? How many words should I work on in a session?
Motor learning theory tells us about the benefits and drawbacks of different schedules of practice.
* Distributed practice may be working on 10 different words in a set during a session, or scheduling less frequent sessions. Distributed practice yields slower progress, but better learning and generalization.
* Block Practice is practicing each word in a block of many repetitions. For instance, practice "me" 50 times, them "mine" 50 times, then "up" 50 times. You get better performance on trained words, but less generalization. A "modified" block may look like 50 reps on "me", 50 reps on "mine" 20 reps on "up".
* Random Practice is taking those same words and mixing them up randomly. Say "mine" then "me" then "up". This yields better motor learning, but slow progress.
Vary your set of practice words and how they are presented.
Movement sequences should be practiced under different conditions and contexts to improve motor learning. Choose a movement sequence, but practiced varied examples, different coarticulatory contexts and manners of production. For instance, you could choose a bilabial to a vowel. Your set could include me, my, bee, baby.Don't forget prosody!
Work on this early and often. Once the child is successful in one context, practice the word or phrase loud and soft, hi and low, normal or slow. Say it as a statement or with rising question inflection. Go out! Go out! Go out? Just be sure you never segment your model. Teach "shhhhhhhoooo" and not "sh"+"oo".~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
What should feedback look like?
There are two types of feedback that play a part in learning:
* Intrinsic feedback is sensory information- what the child hears or sees or feels. Sensory feedback may not be enough in CAS.
* Extrinsic feedback, which provides information on how accurate the attempt was "That's right!" and what the child needs to do differently "Be sure your lips are together." This is especially important early in treatment. As a child progress, reduce extrinsic feedback, to so the child does not become overly dependent on it, and can improve self-monitoring.
* Intrinsic feedback is sensory information- what the child hears or sees or feels. Sensory feedback may not be enough in CAS.
* Extrinsic feedback, which provides information on how accurate the attempt was "That's right!" and what the child needs to do differently "Be sure your lips are together." This is especially important early in treatment. As a child progress, reduce extrinsic feedback, to so the child does not become overly dependent on it, and can improve self-monitoring.
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So what do you do exactly?
For the child with severe apraxia, start with mass practice and blocked practice, with frequent and immediate feedback.

2. Plan shorter, more frequent sessions using block or modified block practice.
3. You may want to choose stimulus words with two different vowels.
4. Target functional words such as hi, bye, out, ow or down. Check with family to see what words are important to the child: a pet's name, favorite toy, family names, his own name, are all good targets to include for functional speech.
5. Provide immediate, frequent and very specific feedback.
As the child progresses, move toward distributed practice and random practice, with less frequent feedback, delivered with greater delays.
1. Increase the number of stimulus words: up to ten.
2. Sessions can be longer and less frequent.
3. Don't provide feedback for every trial. Make it less frequent and less immediate. I would continue to make feedback specific.
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You've done it! You have an awesome therapy plan in place for your student.
NOTE: Next time I will be talking about Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (DTTC) and some awesome therapy techniques, tips, and tricks, so stay tuned, my friends.
See you soon, and please don't forget to share this post so we can spread the word!