screenings
Facial and intraoral structures
Anatomy
Diadochokinesis
Interpreting test scores and sample analysis
100

Every child should have one of these and a complete evaluation if they have speech difficulties. Screened at 20 dB, 1000 dB, 2000 dB and 4000 dB. 

What is a hearing screening?

100

Van der Woude syndrom causes this on the lips. 

What are pits? 

100

These sit in posterior oral cavity and can be enlarged and intrude into the pharyngeal cavity. They are not an asset in speech 

What are the tonsils? 

100

Do diadochokinetic rates increase or decrease with age?

what is increase? 

100

This score cannot be used for interpretation, it must first be converted. 

What is a raw score? 

200

These are used to differentiate between structural restrictions and impairment of speech function. Should be preformed during the initial speech and language evaluation. 

What is an oral peripheral exam?

200

There are 20 of these teeth. 

What are deciduous (baby) teeth?

200

These are the primary site of velopharyngeal closure in children. 

What are the adenoids? 

200

You must use caution when using this to interpret diadochokinetic rates.

what is normative data? 

200

This in an index of whether we were to administer a test on a different day, statistically where would the childs standard score be likely to fall? 

What is confidence interval? 

300

The most common OPE conducted on children. 

What is the verbal motor production assessment for children (VMPAC)?

300

Class two occlusion. 

What is an overbite? 

300

If they adenoids are enlarged they obstruct the posterior aspect of the nasal chamber causing what? 

what is denasality? 

300

Diadokinesis is testing this when a child is producing sequences. 

What is speed and rhythm? 
300

Sounds that occur at least how many times are considered marginal? 

What is one to two times? 

400

During an OPE this is tested to see if there is any movement during sustained phonation. 

What is the soft palate?

400

This syndrom causes an underdeveloped facial skeletal system, conductive hearing loss, retracted jaw and open mouth posture. 

What is treacher collins syndrome? 

400

The larynx can have unilateral paresis of what nerve? This is common in impairments like hemifacial microsomia. 

what is the vagus nerve? 

400

To get diadochokinetic rates SLPs can measure the number of repetitons in a given time period or? 

What is the time it takes for the speaker to complete a certain number of repetitions. 
400

This level of phonetic inventory includes syllabic, sonorant, consonantal, coronal features. Labial/alveolar place, voice contrast as well as the inclusion of fricatives and affricates. 

What is level C? 

500

There is no evidence to support that this type of therapy can help a child with their speech.

What is nonspeech oral motor exercise programs?

500

To test the palate during an OME, what is done? Used to test for a submucosal cleft palate. 

What is palpate and touch the hard palate with a gloved hand? 

500
A condition where one side of the face is less developed than the other. 

what is hemifacial microsomia? 

500

Producing rapidly alternating articulatory movements. 

what is diadochokinesis? 

500

If a PCC is >85% what is its severity?

What is mild?