- Know varying organizations that certify professionals and accredite programs in remediating language-based learning disabilities
- Understand the differences between a speech-language therapist and a tutor in qualifications, roles, goals, and involvement in giving recommendations
Which will best help me?
With any investment of time and money, outcome is the closest measure of success, and language intervention is no exception. Individuals with dyslexia will require practice and repetition to master newly learned skills. Essentially, more is better; but you do need to consider what works best for you given such things as attention span, daily activities, or constraints in your schedule.
Historically, speech-language and reading therapy sessions have been scheduled twice weekly for 30-60 minutes. We do know that scheduling more frequent sessions each week can have a positive effect on outcomes. Daily intervention is ideal. The length of the session should be long enough to get work done, but not so long as to fatigue the client. It follows that older individuals will be able to tolerate longer sessions.
If you have limited financial resources like so many of us, it is better to have the sessions scheduled more frequently over a short period than to spread the same number of sessions over a longer period. Having therapy on a more intensive schedule allows the client to experience success at a faster rate, which leads to positive beliefs about learning and enhances motivation.
Working with a professional with training in reading disability or an academic therapist is another a good place to start. Professionals can receive certification from a member of the International Multisensory Structured Language Education Council (IMSLEC), a non-profit that offers a rigorous accreditation program in MSLE, i.e., Orton-Gillingham-based approaches. The Academic Language Therapy Association also offers certification emphasizing reading, spelling, handwriting, and written expression. The Academy of Orton-Gillingham Practioners and Educators accredits programs and certifies individuals in the Orton-Gillingham approach. The American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) is the credentialing organization of speech-language pathologists, a few of whom may have advanced training in reading disability. The Association of Educational Therapists(AET) is another organization where you can find qualified professionals who provide educational therapy.
If you are in or near Southeast Michigan and need an evaluation for a suspected language disorder or dyslexia, you can email Dr. Joanne Pierson, who has the rare skill set as a speech-language pathologist with an advanced degree in literacy, language, and learning disabilities, including dyslexia, at dyslexiahelp@umich.edu.
We’ve outlined some of the differences between speech-language therapy and tutoring. We want to note that some professionals who hold certification from IMSLEC, for example, may, for the ease of marketing and communication, refer to themselves as «tutors» rather than «therapists» The practices of these individuals fall in a similar category as speech-language therapy as described below. In the comparison below, we are using the word «tutoring» to refer to its more traditional use rather than to refer to those individuals with advanced training in intervention practices.
It’s in your best interest, as the consumer, to talk with the professional about his or her credentials. That said, you can use the information below, as well as information from the organizations listed above, to guide you as you find the professional who best meets your needs. Most importantly, as we’ve said elsewhere on DyslexiaHelp, you want someone who approaches remediation in a systematic, goal-directed, outcome-driven (i.e., goals are measurable) manner and can demonstrate improvement.
Speech-language therapy |
Tutoring |
Qualifications
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Qualifications
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Role
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Role
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Goals
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Goals
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Recommendations
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Recommendations
If you select a tutor for your child with dyslexia:
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