This
webinar presents a framework—inspired by research and practice from
behavioral health and counseling psychology along with communication sciences
and disorders—for assisting teens and adults in the design and
implementation of stuttering intervention. The course is based on the concept
that meaningful stuttering intervention and outcomes are based in the
client’s and clinician’s shared understanding of the
importance and weight that the client places on changing the physical
attributes of stuttering, their thoughts and feelings about it, their use of
avoidance strategies, and how ready they are to change one or all of these
components. With these considerations in mind, the presenter offers strategies
clinicians can use to help teens and adults who stutter make decisions about
what they want to and can change in their experience of stuttering and then
assist them in reaching their goals.
Learning
Outcomes
You will
be able to:
- Describe
how an individual’s uncertainty in desired treatment outcomes and low
self-confidence in their abilities can impact their readiness for
change
- Assess
an individual’s readiness for change using the stage of change scale,
decisional balance scale, and situational self-efficacy
scale
- Use
motivational interviewing to help individuals who stutter identify their goals
for stuttering treatment and increase their self-confidence in their ability to
sustain change
- Select
treatment activities that are aligned with the individual’s current
readiness for change
Contents
- Assessment
- Principles
of change readiness
- Principles
of stuttering intervention
Presenter
Information
Patricia
M. Zebrowski, PhD, CCC-SLP, BCS-S, is Professor Emerita at the
University of Iowa and an American Board of Fluency and Fluency
Disorders-recognized specialist. Her research, teaching, and clinical expertise
is in the nature and treatment of stuttering, with special focus on
adolescence. For over 20 years Tricia directed UISPEAKS, a summer residential
therapy program for teenagers who stutter. In her recent work, she applied the
Transtheoretical Model of behavior change to uncover the impact that thoughts
and beliefs have on adolescents' readiness to engage in therapy. The results of
this research were recently published in the American Journal of
Speech-Language Pathology (https://doi.org/10.1044/2021_AJSLP-20-00186).Along
with colleagues Dr. Edward Conture (Vanderbilt) and Dr. Julie Anderson (Indiana
University), Tricia is co-editing the 4th edition of Stuttering and Related Disorders
of Fluency, which will be published by Thieme.
What Participants Said:
It was amazing to learn about how research was developed and conducted and how the data was analyzed. I really appreciated how all terms were clearly defined. I really appreciated how Dr. Patricia Zebrowski explained why it is so important to determine why some clients benefit more than others from speech therapy. Dr. Patricia Zebrowski explained why it is so important to really understand the essential elements of the term "motivation."
The course was a very comprehensive overview of the stages to change model that helps to assess and support the readiness of a teenager to change their stuttering behavior.
This was very engaging and informational. I appreciated how clearly the concepts and theoretical underpinning was explained, and then how this could be used in practice with teens who stutter.
Financial Disclosures:
- Financial
compensation from ASHA for this presentation
- Clinical
research grant from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Foundation
Nonfinancial
Disclosures:
Assessment
Type
Self-assessment—Think
about what you learned and report on the Completion Form how you will use your
new knowledge.
To earn continuing
education credit, you must complete and submit the learning assessment by October 1, 2027.
Program
History and CE Information
Live
webinar date: September 29, 2022
End date: October 1, 2027
This course is offered
for 0.2 ASHA CEUs (Intermediate level, Professional area).