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- Shivani
- Patel
- 1388 Haight Street #1032
San Francisco
California
94117
United States - The Speech Path | Speech and Language Therapy Inc.

San Francisco
California
94117
United States
The therapy process begins with a thorough assessment to understand your child’s unique strengths, needs, and communication profile. From there, we develop clear, personalized goals and select evidence-based treatment approaches (e.g., DTTC, ReST) for CAS. Sessions are highly interactive and focus on helping your child practice speech movements in a way that builds accuracy, consistency, and confidence over time. We use frequent repetition, meaningful practice, and carefully chosen cues to support motor learning, all while keeping sessions engaging and motivating for your child. Progress is monitored closely, and goals are adjusted as your child grows and their skills evolve. We view therapy as a partnership—with your child and your family at the center—and we are committed to supporting communication in ways that are functional, respectful, and empowering!
We encourage and welcome parents to participate in the therapy process! We intentionally include parent training in every session, so families feel confident and capable to support their child's communication outside of speech therapy. Parents will have an opportunity to observe how the clinician practices with their child and discuss why skills are being targeted in that way. Then, the parent will have an opportunity to try doing what the clinician did while receiving live coaching from the clinician. This helps make sure parents are using strategies with confidence and fidelity. Our goal is for practice at home to feel doable and to meaningfully support progress made in therapy.
AAC is a great tool to support a child's communication. Low tech (e.g., communication board) and high tech AAC (e.g., speech-generating device) can help a child continue to expand expressive language skills (e.g., how words are combined to communicate more complex wants/ideas) and get their needs met when speaking is too challenging. High-tech AAC devices can also provide a consistent auditory model (i.e., the same word is said the same way each time) to help facilitate speech production in children with CAS.