Speech-Language Pathologist Uses Cued Speech
for Hearing Children
By Anne Marie Dziekonski
Carla Davidson is a speech-language pathologist at Longridge Elementary
School in Greece, NY (near Rochester). She uses Cued Speech on a
daily basis while providing therapy to with children who are not
deaf or hard-of-hearing. Carla learned to cue eight years ago and
has not stopped since! She became fluent in Cued Speech while working
with deaf students in private practice.
Carla uses Cued Speech in a variety of therapy sessions. She has
a practical application of cueing for almost every student she works
with. Carla frequently uses Cued Speech when working with children
with articulation problems. She believes Cued Speech highlights
children’s speech distortions and substitutions and helps
them discriminate between sounds. Additionally, cueing allows Carla
to show her students how sounds are blended and sequenced together
to make words.
Carla finds that children can follow directions better when they
are cued. For children who stutter, cueing provides information
about normal rate and stress patterns, gives a visual representation
of types of dysfluencies, and helps develop appropriate eye contact.
Carla has given presentations to her colleagues about Cued Speech
and its applications. She is pleased with the results Cued Speech
has had in her therapy and will continue to use Cued Speech in the
future.
Anne Marie wrote this article as a graduate student in the
Nazareth College Speech-Language Pathology specialty training program
in deafness. Reprinted from On Cue 2003, issue 2.
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