A few days ago
complicated

How to be a good speech pathologist clinically?

I want to be a good clinician in speech pathology. It does take time to develop clinical skills doesnt it? Are there any ways or techniques which I can practice to brush up my clinical skills in interacting with clients, performing therapy, building rapport, etc.? Many thanks.

Top 2 Answers
A few days ago
Anonymous

Favorite Answer

In addition to what the previous poster said, I’d say:

– always ask yourself what you can do to have even better sessions (sounds like you are already doing that)

– always try to learn something from other clinicians you meet

– remember that creativity is great but you do not need to reinvent the wheel for everything

– remember that therapy should be challenging enough that the patient needs some assistance but not so challenging that they cannot succeed

– stay organized

– keep all the resources you can

– be prepared for sessions, etc.

– be ethical

– talk to the patients directly (even when they do not seem cognitively with it)

– have open lines of communication with caretakers

– continue your education (not just b/c it is required)

Best wishes 🙂

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A few days ago
?
It took 5 years for me to feel competent, so hang in there!

The most important thing is to have compassion; the rapport will come. Always ask about what the patient was like prior to the precipitating event.

Learn as much as you can about the disorder(s) your patient has, or may have, if you haven’t already learned.

Realize a patient can have several pathologies at once, such as apraxia, dysarthria, and aphasia co-occuring. I wasn’t taught that in grad school, and I was perplexed by it during my CFY. Learn as much as you can about anatomy, physiology, and neurology.

It is really helpful to learn about intrinsic and extrinsic motivation, as well as operant and classical conditioning. You will use these more than you may realize.

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