Getting toddlers to talk more

Learn about: Getting toddlers to talk more from Barbara Schacter, LCSW,...
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Getting toddlers to talk more

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The best way to get your toddler to talk is through play therapy, or just plain play with your child. Be very verbal and ask them to be verbal as well. Ask them questions. Know that the what, where and who questions generally developmentally come first, and when and why come later. So you can ask them the what, where and who questions and look for a response. Also if you read with your child, ask questions. Read a page, ask a question. Look for them to answer verbally. Ask them to use their words.

Learn about: Getting toddlers to talk more from Barbara Schacter, LCSW,...

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Barbara Schacter, LCSW

Speech-Language Pathologist

Barbara was raised in New England, then attended The George Washington University for both undergraduate and graduate school.  She began as a dance major, but soon realized that she might have had a colorful, but short career and she was looking for a profession that would inspire and challenge her for many years.  As luck would have it, G.W.U. had an excellent speech pathology and audiology department. After receiving her Bachelor of Arts degree, the university offered her a fellowship for graduate school with an internship associated with not only their speech and hearing clinic, but with the George Washington University Hospital, as well. 

After graduate school, she secured a position in a private school for children with language and learning disabilities.  She followed that with a 10-year stint at a residential children's psychiatric center.  Longing to work with a more varied population, she then worked in a public school in New Jersey.  There, she developed and taught a language enrichment program for all kindergartners in the district and provided speech and language therapy for the two special education classes, as well as serving those students from kindergarten to sixth grade having articulation, fluency, voice, cleft palate, hearing impairment and language delays.  In 1992, she moved to Los Angeles and was hired by Saint John's Health Center to participate as a member on their cleft palate team as well as providing pediatric and geriatric out-patient speech and language services.  Several years later, she opened a private practice in Pacific Palisades, CA, which continues to this day.  She is delighted to say that she still gets a thrill out of the work she does...and that is such a gift!

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