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jpiccolo

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  • Location
    Utah
  • Application Season
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  • Program
    Speech-Language Pathology

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  1. I’d say in general, most programs are going to give you a broad experience with disorders across the lifespan. They kinda have to for asha accreditation. But my suggestion would be when looking at schools, check their classes and also internship opportunities for ones with an emphasis on autism.
  2. I agree. I don’t think it needs to be mentioned. Different application committees and universities may have different things they’re looking for so it may not be much of a boost.
  3. I had a grad prof who stuttered. And I met one at an open house for another school. Being able to demonstrate techniques is important so you’re fine if you can do that for your clients/students
  4. Just be aware you’ll have to do pediatric in grad school to get therapy hours. It’s not impossible to go medical but will be more difficult. Look at the SLP Reddit. Others have talked about this and the people there are more established in the field than here.
  5. I gave them all a card. One also got cookies and another one a set of pens that she liked. I gave my CF mentor a card and cute decorative sign from hallmark. Whatever shows your gratitude will be appreciated.
  6. I did computer and eventually my iPad. Helpful to put notes right on PowerPoints or PDFs. A handful of classmates took notes by hand but most were computer.
  7. I’d take it and find out your score. Then you really know where you’re at and where to improve. I don’t think you have to send them to schools if you aren’t happy with the score. Or if you haven’t registered yet, don’t waste the money until you’re ready. It’s expensive and stressful so make it count.
  8. GRE is worth a shot. I used magoosh and raised my verbal quite a bit.
  9. Whoa that is rough! Mine were much more laidback and never that many hours. Unfortunately you’re probably stuck with the agreement the school made. For our school placements we were explicitly told not to readjust hours, even those with long commutes. I will say I don’t think that’s at all typical of the field. Every setting is different but that seems overkill. Find a way to take breaths, relax, be calm, and push through.
  10. Not curved in my grad program
  11. Clinical as in medical or research or as in anything but schools? My program was less about settings and more about disorders and treatment. We all had to do one medical and one school placement, plus another wherever. As long as you understand the disorders and treatment you can apply it to many job settings
  12. I used my personal email. As long as it isn’t something unprofessional (ie not your name) you should be fine.
  13. The one hour sounds doable. You can read study or plan sessions on the train. As long as they run early or late enough when you have to be on campus. It’ll get old but that’s a good chunk of money too. As for moving home, I did it last year for an internship. I did hate parts of it since I was 26 and literally had no friends at all for seven months. The internship kept me busy as did studying for the praxis and comps. Then I had to find other ways to keep busy when I had no job in between internship and starting my cfy. But it saved me a lot of money and is now a distant memory
  14. I can’t speak for that specific program (sorry) but I will say even an easier program will likely be demanding. My program wasn’t necessarily difficult, but we had to learn to manage our time well to be able study and also plan daily sessions. I’d consider what placements and externship opportunities you’ll have. Those often make the biggest difference when job hunting. And consider if the cost is worth it. We don’t make bank as SLPs and if tuition or cost of living is astronomical then you’ll be paying it off for years while having comparable job prospects as most other schools.
  15. I’m not sure where you’re getting the short term part of SLP. Unless you’re working in acute care or rehab or a traveling SLP. In schools or private therapy you spend a lot of time with clients.
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