Voice Disorders
Speech Sound and Motor Speech Disorders
Feeding & Swallowing Disorders
Fluency Disorders
Language Disorders
100

One profession at risk for a voice disorder

Who is a singer, pastor, professor, teacher, coach, actor, talk show host, radio broadcaster, politician, key note speaker, etc.

100

TRUE or FALSE

Childhood apraxia of speech is common.

What is FALSE?

100

TRUE/FALSE

Chewing occurs in the oral transport stage.

What is FALSE?

100

TRUE/FALSE

Blinking during a stuttering episode is considered a secondary behavior.

What is TRUE?

100

When the language delay is caused by the hearing loss or ASD, then it is this type of disorder.

Primary or Secondary

What is secondary?

200

TRUE OR FALSE

Gender affirming voice therapy is not to treat a voice disorder.

What is TRUE?

200
The type of SSD that is not typically seen as part of normal development.

A. Omissions

B. Distortions

C. Additions

E. Substitutions


What are Additions?

200

Stage of swallow where respiration ceases briefly.

esophageal

oral prep

oral transport

pharyngeal

What is PHARYNGEAL?

200

MMMMMMMMy name is MMMMMMMary is an example of this core behavior.

Block

Prolongation

Repetition

What is a prolongation?

200

This type of treatment to help the client with a language disorder manage the effects of their disorder rather than eliminate its signs.

Compensation

Remediation

Prevention

What is COMPENSATION?

300

Treatment for this disorder is often to remove part or all of the larynx.

What is laryngeal cancer?

300

I want a chocolate chip "tookie" is an example of this type of speech sound disorder.

What is a substitution?

300

The clinical name for a swallowing disorder

What is dysphagia?

300

The age before which fluency disorder is typically identified.

What is 5 years old?
300

Most common cause of aphasia.

What is a stroke or CVA?

400
The most common cause of a voice disorder in children and in adults.

What are nodules?

400

In addition to the actual speech testing, one of the other parts of a full assessment for speech.

What is the case history, the oral mechanism screening, a hearing screening or a language screening/evaluation?

400

One reason parents of a child with a feeding disorder in under stress.

What is caring for the child?  Making decisions for the child?  Having guilt?  Finding time away?  Having stressful mealtimes?  Financial burden?

400

Two risk factors for a fluency disorder.

What is being a male and having a family history of stuttering?

400

The name of a receptive and/or expressive language impairment not attributed to any general or specific cause or condition.

What is DLD or SLI?

500

Voice disorder characterized by a strained-strangle vocal quality with unknown cause.

What is spasmodic dysphonia?

500

Impairment of motor programming and planning.

What is apraxia?

500

Two compensatory strategies for adults with a swallowing disorder.  

What is one changing consistency or temp of the food? What is having the client tuck their chin in?  What is alternating solid and liquid or having extra swallows per bit or altering portion size?  What is minimizing distractions or having staff monitor or assist?

500

This treatment type focuses on stuttering more effortlessly with less tension and paying attention to the feelings and attitudes of the person who stutters.

What is Stuttering Modification?

500

The three defining traits are memory impairment, impairment in cognition skills and presence of aphasia, apraxia or agnosia.

What is Dementia?