Speech Therapist or Speech Language Pathologist

SLPs, Speech Therapists, and SLPAs

May 15, 20211 min read

May is Better Speech and Hearing Month (BSHM). Do you think about your speech or swallowing when you do not have any problems?  Probably not.  But when you have a problem, who do you see? The answer is Speech-Language Pathologists (SLPs).  You may have heard of speech-language pathologists, speech therapists, or speech teachers.  In schools, some SLPs may call themselves speech teachers because it is child-friendly.  However, SLPs are not teachers unless they also have teaching certificates.

SLPs complete their training in graduate schools and take the certification exam to satisfy the licensure requirements set by each state.  Before being fully licensed and certified, we worked as interns.  This stage is called the Speech-Language Pathology Clinical Fellow Year (SLP-CFY). Speech-Language Pathology Clinical Fellows (SLP-CFs) work under the supervision of fully licensed/certified SLPs. When we talk about the license, the regulations vary by state.  

Most SLPs are also certified by our national organization, the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA), which issues the Certificate of Clinical Competence (CCC). Some states allow us to practice with only the state license, while others require both a state license and ASHA certification.

In addition to having a speech pathologist on your team, you may also have a speech-language pathology assistant (SLPA) or a speech therapy assistant. SLPAs have an Associate's or Bachelor's Degree in relevant disciplines. They work under the supervision of licensed speech-language pathologists. Speech therapy assistants work closely with SLPs and follow treatment plans designed by the supervising SLPs.

Speech Language Pathologist (SLP) = Speech Therapist = Speech Language Therapist

RESOURCES:

SLPA

https://www.asha.org/certification/education-pathways-to-speech-language-pathology-assistants-certification/

https://www.asha.org/assistants-certification-program/slpa-faqs/#b1

SLP

https://www.asha.org/slp/

https://www.asha.org/policy/sp2016-00343/

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