Barriers in Collaborative Practice among SLP/Ts and Special Educationists Working in Special Education Settings
Abstract
Objective: To investigate the needs of speech and language therapy service in special education settings. To specify that the particular speech language and communication needs of an individual cannot be sufficiently met by one clinician alone.Methods
A comprehensive survey questionnaire was employed to attain a clear view of the similarities and differences between the groups of professionals, their understandings of terminology, spoken language indicators of SLCN, associated academic needs, behavioral challenges, and professional barriers to meeting the children's needs.Results
 Fluctuations in the response pattern for both groups were observed when it came to understanding of latest terminologies associated with SLCN, SLP/Ts were predominantly more aware of the terms than special educationists. Special education teachers were unexpectedly more aware of the academic and behavior features related to speech and language difficulties. However, training, advice as well as resource availability saw special educationists lacking whereas slp/ts showed a consistent pattern of having received the necessary training and resources.Conclusion
 A special education environment is designed to fulfill an individual's needs, whether they be physical, sensory, cognitive or communicative and to achieve that goal, a compatible team of healthcare professionals and special educators is crucial. In this particular scenario, there is an impending need for both speech language pathologists/ therapists and special educators to understand the prerequisites of each other's role and more importantly how they can assist to provide better Individualized Education Plans(IEPs), improve peer and staff interactions, prevent undesired behavioral interactions, evolve the academic experience and the therapeutic intervention necessary to enhance the quality of life of an individual with speech-language and communication needs.Keywords:
Speech-Language and Communication Needs (SLCN), Special Education teachers, Special Education settings, Multi-professional collaborationPublished
2022/03/15
Issue
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
This is an open-access journal and all the published articles / items are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. For comments psimjournal@gmail.com