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Volume 2, Issue 3 (Suppl)

J Speech Pathol Ther

ISSN: 2472-5005, an open access journal

ISLPC 2017

May 22-23, 2017

Page 27

Notes:

conference

series

.com

May 22-23, 2017 Las Vegas, USA

International Conference on

Speech Language Pathology

Sandra M Grether, J Speech Pathol Ther 2017, 2:3,(Suppl)

http://dx.doi.org/10.4172/2472-5005-C1-001

Effective communication skills are essential for better quality of life

C

ommunication is more than just being able to verbally pronounce words and sentences. We communicate to participate

in a conversation, asking and answering questions and commenting. We also communicate to regulate the behavior of

others and to interact socially. But to achieve these purposes effectively we need to be competent across multiple areas.

Linguistically, we need to know what words to say and how to organize them into grammatically correct sentences so our

communication partners understand us and perceive us as a competent communicator. Socially, we need to know when it is our

turn to speak and how to introduce a topic, maintain it and redirect it if we want to talk about something else. We need to be

able to share our stories and know how to effectively end a conversation. Strategically, we need to know when someone does

not understand us and we may need to clarify or add more information. We need to be effective, multi-modal communicators

across our day and use speech and gestures, as well as our phone and written technology to communicate our messages. Our lives are

adversely affected when we cannot do these things competently. To maintain, regain and/or achieve a better quality of life, we need

to determine what is preventing us from being an effective communicator and what we can do to make things better.

Biography

Sandra M Grether is a Speech-Language Pathologist III at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center in the Division of Developmental and Behavioral Pediatrics

and Adjunct Associate Professor at the University of Cincinnati, College of Allied Health Sciences. She is responsible for interdisciplinary student leadership training

and research in prelinguistic communication with individuals with significant intellectual disabilities, impact of cognition on language in pediatric hearing loss and

cognitive disabilities, childhood apraxia of speech and augmentative communication. She has been with CCHMC and UC for 17 years and a Practicing Clinician

for 43 years.

Sandra.Grether@cchmc.org

Sandra M Grether

University of Cincinnati, USA