Category: Oral Motor

Articulation Therapy Model

By Pam Marshalla

Q: You said something in a class recently that I did not write down, and I wish I had. It was about the relationships between oral motor, phonemes, and phonology in therapy. Can you repeat it here? I think you are referring to this statement: Movements create the phonemes that are used in phonological patterns to express the language for use in conversation and literacy.  

Sloppy Sh with Puffy Cheeks

By Pam Marshalla

Q: My student is unable to produce the Sh sound and it sounds very slushy.  When he tries to say the sound, I noticed that he puffs up his cheeks with air. How can I get him to not do this and make that air flow come out the front? Here is what Nemoy and Davis (1937) would have done–– Have him make a Long E–– “Eeeeeeeee.” Make it be a strong, exaggerated, very smiley, and prolonged E. Super-exaggerate it….

My Heros in the SLP Profession

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I heard you say that Van Riper was your greatest hero of all time in the profession, but then you said you had others that you didn’t mention. Who else do you admire in the field? What an interesting question! Okay, here are the people that have been the most influential to me, presented in categories that are the most important to my work. Articulation The one-and-only Charles Van Riper wins this top place of honor because he is…

Differentiating Articulation, Phonology, and Oral Motor

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I still don’t get how to explain the difference between “articulation” and “phonology” and “oral motor.” Can you take a run at that again? I think my last answer to this was way too involved. Here is the short and sweet of it using phoneme M as an example in a very simplified way: Articulation ARTICULATION concerns the mechanics of sound production: The position assumed by the jaw, lips, tongue, and velum during production of a phoneme. For example, the…

Outgrow jaw instability?

By Pam Marshalla

Q: My four-year-old client has apraxia and jaw instability. The mom wants to know if jaw stability will improve on its own. There is no way to know that. Certainly jaw stability improves with time, but it may not improve in this child without help. He is developing oral motor patterns that may stay with him until he receives therapy to change them. He should have jaw stability by now, so the question is, why doesn’t he? Whatever is preventing…

Getting the Mouth to Open

By Pam Marshalla

Q: I have a preschool client who talks with his mouth closed. He can imitate me when I model an open mouth posture, but he always closes it when he says a word. I know that he is struggling with motor planning, but I just don’t know where to go from here. Any advice? This client can open his mouth, meaning that the mechanics are good. He also can imitate the posture, meaning that he has control over this movement….

Oral Habits and Dentition

By Pam Marshalla

Q: Why does an oral habit like thumb sucking effect the oral structures in some children but not others? I have seen kids who suck their thumbs who have no dental problems, and I have seen kids who suck their thumbs who have terrible open bites. As I understand things, any oral habit can affect oral structures depending upon the following three factors–– Frequency –– How often the client engages in the habit. Once per day? Ten times per day?…

Substituting N for L

By Pam Marshalla

Q: My 5-year-old client substitutes N for L. I cannot seem to help him make the sound oral and not nasal. These are the types of things I would try… Use a Vowel Have her open her mouth wide and say “Ah.” Then have her prolong “Ah” for 5 seconds or more. Then have her continue to say “Ah” while she lifts and lowers her tongue-tip up to the alveolar ridge about 5 times. Tell her, “Don’t try to say…

Apraxia and Dysarthria and Real Oral Motor Therapy

By Pam Marshalla

Q: Would you agree with the following statement:  Children with apraxia will respond to structured production of increasingly difficult syllable shapes, while children with dysarthria need supplementing with oral motor exercises to address muscle weakness. Before I answer your question, let me say a few things about “muscle weakness” and dysarthria because many SLPs––including professors of articulation and phonology––do not seem to understand this area very well. The muscle weakness seen in dysarthria can have many different causes, and the…

Making Speech Targets Salient – Classic Auditory Training – Tools for Amplifying Speech

By Pam Marshalla

This opinion paper was originally posted as a downloadable PDF on my website, authored in September, 2011. Download the original PDF here. *** Making Speech Targets Salient Classic Auditory Training Tools for Amplifying Speech By Pam Marshalla, MA, CCC-SLP Speech-Language Pathologist Making Speech Targets Salient One of the most important things we do in articulation therapy is to make speech units stand out so the client can focus on them. Our most important tool for making speech units salient is our own…