Summit's Birthday
What is February 4th, 2020?
The smallest bone in the body
What is the stapes?
This professional's primary role in feeding therapy is to address oral motor skills.
What is Speech Language Pathologist?
Developmental comprehensive language assessment with items that range from pre-verbal, interaction-based skills to emerging language to early literacy that comes with a purple bear.
What is the Preschool Language Scales (PLS)?
MBSS stands for..
What is Modified Barium Swallow Study?
Summit's first office location
What is Greeley?
The area of the brain that plays an important role in speech production.
What is Broca's area?
SOS stands for...
What is Sequential Oral Sensory?
Treatment strategy that uses pairs of words that differ by only one phoneme or single feature signaling a change in meaning.
What is minimal oppositions or minimal pairs?
_______ is an acquired neurogenic language disorder resulting from an injury to the brain, typically the left hemisphere, that affects the functioning of core elements of the language network.
What is aphasia?
Summit's new bonus structure is based on..
What is profit sharing?
The ring of vessels connecting the anterior and posterior circulations to provide blood the the brain
What is the Circle of Willis?
Most effective procedure for tongue tie release. (according to Amanda)
What is Scissors Frenectomy?
______ is the repetition of utterances produced by others.
What is echolalia?
The five language domains
What is phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics?
Sam and Jessi met while working here in 2018.
What is Aspen Speech Therapy?
The cranial nerves involved in swallowing (5)
What is:
Trigeminal (V), Facial (VII), Glossopharyngeal (IX), Vagus (X), Hypoglossal (XII)
Things that could impact palate height and shape. (3)
What is:
Thumb sucking/pacifier use
Resting tongue posture
Mouth breathing
_______ is an integral stimulation ("look, listen, do what I do") motor programming method that uses a cueing hierarchy (auditory, visual, and tactile) and systematically decreases supports as the child achieves success at each level of the cueing hierarchy.
What is Dynamic Temporal and Tactile Cueing (DTTC)?
ICD-10 code for mixed receptive-expressive language disorder
What is F80.2?
First official Summit employee. (Besides owners)
Who is Kimberly Smith?
The extrinsic muscles of the tongue (4)
What is the genioglossus, hyoglossus, styloglossus, and the palatoglossus?
Tools commonly used for resistive chewing. (3)
What are:
P-chew, Tri-chew, Chewy tube
_________ is characterized by a perceived rapid and/or irregular speech rate, atypical pauses, maze behaviors, pragmatic issues, decreased awareness of fluency problems or moments of disfluency, excessive disfluencies, collapsing or omitting syllables, and language formulation issues, which result in breakdowns in speech clarity and/or fluency
What is cluttering?
A condition in which there is intermittent adduction of the vocal folds that interferes with breathing.
What is paradoxical vocal fold movement (PVFM)?