SLP-educator classroom collaboration: A review to inform reason-based practice

Background and aims Increasingly, speech language pathologists are engaging in collaborative classroom services with teachers and other educators to support children with developmental language disorder and other communication impairments. Recent systematic reviews have provided a summary of only a...

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Main Author: Lisa MD Archibald
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publishing 2017-01-01
Series:Autism & Developmental Language Impairments
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1177/2396941516680369
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spelling doaj-17068efae285437bb875136c087b73152021-04-02T16:58:26ZengSAGE PublishingAutism & Developmental Language Impairments2396-94152017-01-01210.1177/2396941516680369SLP-educator classroom collaboration: A review to inform reason-based practiceLisa MD ArchibaldBackground and aims Increasingly, speech language pathologists are engaging in collaborative classroom services with teachers and other educators to support children with developmental language disorder and other communication impairments. Recent systematic reviews have provided a summary of only a small fraction of the available evidence and recommended the use of reason-based practice in the absence of a sufficient empirically driven evidence base. The purpose of this paper was to provide a broad (but critical) review of the existing evidence. Main contribution Papers were gathered through review of reference lists in the recent systematic reviews and other published works, as well as general internet searches. A total of 49 papers were identified either reporting empirical evidence pertaining to SLP-educator collaborative classroom activities, empirical evidence pertaining to consultative services, classroom instruction, or small group intervention in the classroom, or providing information, discussion, surveys, or reviews related to the topic. Evidence pertaining to vocabulary, oral language, phonological awareness, curriculum-based language, and written language were summarized together with qualifications based on elements of the research design. Conclusion and implications Although much of the evidence must be interpreted with considerable caution, the present review is informative for clinicians looking to adopt a reason-based approach to practice.https://doi.org/10.1177/2396941516680369
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lisa MD Archibald
spellingShingle Lisa MD Archibald
SLP-educator classroom collaboration: A review to inform reason-based practice
Autism & Developmental Language Impairments
author_facet Lisa MD Archibald
author_sort Lisa MD Archibald
title SLP-educator classroom collaboration: A review to inform reason-based practice
title_short SLP-educator classroom collaboration: A review to inform reason-based practice
title_full SLP-educator classroom collaboration: A review to inform reason-based practice
title_fullStr SLP-educator classroom collaboration: A review to inform reason-based practice
title_full_unstemmed SLP-educator classroom collaboration: A review to inform reason-based practice
title_sort slp-educator classroom collaboration: a review to inform reason-based practice
publisher SAGE Publishing
series Autism & Developmental Language Impairments
issn 2396-9415
publishDate 2017-01-01
description Background and aims Increasingly, speech language pathologists are engaging in collaborative classroom services with teachers and other educators to support children with developmental language disorder and other communication impairments. Recent systematic reviews have provided a summary of only a small fraction of the available evidence and recommended the use of reason-based practice in the absence of a sufficient empirically driven evidence base. The purpose of this paper was to provide a broad (but critical) review of the existing evidence. Main contribution Papers were gathered through review of reference lists in the recent systematic reviews and other published works, as well as general internet searches. A total of 49 papers were identified either reporting empirical evidence pertaining to SLP-educator collaborative classroom activities, empirical evidence pertaining to consultative services, classroom instruction, or small group intervention in the classroom, or providing information, discussion, surveys, or reviews related to the topic. Evidence pertaining to vocabulary, oral language, phonological awareness, curriculum-based language, and written language were summarized together with qualifications based on elements of the research design. Conclusion and implications Although much of the evidence must be interpreted with considerable caution, the present review is informative for clinicians looking to adopt a reason-based approach to practice.
url https://doi.org/10.1177/2396941516680369
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