
When Joseph was three, his mom realized that he was having trouble with his speech.
She contacted the McMains Children's Developmental Center where Joseph was
evaluated. He began speech/language therapy to address concerns with language and
with apraxia, a motor- based speech problem where the brain will substitute a different
sound or word than what is needed. Upon first starting speech therapy, Joseph would
hang back by his mom not wanting to venture back with the therapist. He would go
though, and soon he was heading reluctantly back on his own, but would go literally as
quiet as a mouse. Along with his individual speech therapy, he was also paired
sometimes with another child. Together the boys would learn and build together on each
other's strengths. Often though as children enter school and have new learning tasks to
accomplish, it is not unusual for new problems to surface. In Joseph's case, he was now
exhibiting some reading concerns at his school. His teacher noted that Joseph was having
difficulty with reading comprehension, word recall and recognition, and writing
sentences. After the teacher, speech therapist, and mom consulted, Joseph was then
scheduled to receive a multidisciplinary evaluation, at McMains Children's
Developmental Center which included a psychological evaluation for IQ, educational
evaluation for strengths and weaknesses in reading and math, speech and language
evaluation for processing information and occupational therapy evaluation for fine motor
concerns. At the conclusion of this process, Joseph was able to start educational therapy
to assist him with these reading concerns. Joseph is a
happy energetic young man who loves playing basketball, soccer, and the piano. He is
also the proud new big brother. And by the way, that quiet little mouse now makes his
presence known as he goes back to therapy greeting others along the way! Joseph has now entered third grade.