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Children and stuttering: why do some recover? |
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Tuesday, 09 April 2013 14:58 |
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Two Purdue University professors have received a $3 million grant to study why some children grow out of stuttering. The funding from the National Institutes of Health will support research designed to help identify children who are less likely to recover and require immediate therapy.
Leading the research are Anne Smith and Christine Weber-Fox, Professors of speech, language and hearing sciences at the Purdue Stuttering Project in Indiana. They will follow 100 children who stutter, first seen at ages 4-5, over five years. They hope to develop tests to put in the clinical battery to detect a high risk for chronic stuttering in preschoolers. Read more here.
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Diversity Outreach Project |
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Written by Mary Rose S. Labandelo
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Friday, 05 April 2013 14:35 |
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I am a stutterer and I have accepted my speech. In the past, I have experienced ridicule from individuals and groups. I felt self conscious, inferior and did not see the purpose of my speech challenge. I attended therapy with brief fluency. The turning point in my life occurred when I started the Vancouver Support Group for Stutterers in 1997 and became involved with the stuttering community.
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Read more...
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Online dating and stuttering |
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Written by Lisa Wilder
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Friday, 05 April 2013 14:26 |
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The brilliant podcast site Stuttertalk has an interview with Sara Macintyre who speaks about online dating for PWS.
Return guest SARA MACINTYRE joins CARYN HERRING, ROISIN MCMANUS, and JOEL KORTE (the “Stuttertalk B Team”) to discuss online dating and stuttering. They discuss how best to advertise your stuttering while on a date, people’s reactions to stuttering, gender roles and stuttering, and much more.
Check it out!
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