Review:
Jeanne McHugh, M.S., George Washington University, Doody's Review Service: "This is a must have manual for any clinician seeing children who stutter. It is the first assessment tool that combines information on "speech-associated negative emotion, voluntary behaviors designed to avoid, escape or hide stuttering and mal-attitude towards speech." It helps clinicians distinguish PWS from PWNS by means other than dysfluency counts. In addition, the findings "give direction to the strategies and tactics of therapy," as well as "highlight a child's needs and strengths and provide the clinician with a therapeutic road map." Furthermore, readministration can be completed "to see if therapy has had an effect on a particular dimension." -------------------- Hugo Gregory, Stuttering Therapy: Rationale and Procedures, (2003): "The CAT and the SSC are the most effectively standardized self-report approaches to beliefs, feelings, and behavior of stuttering children being employed at present for research and clinical purposes." Peggy Janssen, Speech Pathologist and Researcher, University Medical Center, Utrecht, The Netherlands. Author of Behavior Therapy for Stuttering: "I use the Speech Situation Checklist and the Behavior Checklist in my work with those who stutter because of their beautiful simplicity and reliability (...) and recommend them to clinicians - concerned with the care of those who stutter." Doody Enterprises, Inc., Doody's Book Reviews: "This is a must have manual for any clinician seeing children who stutter. It is the first assessment tool that combines information on speech-associated negative emotion, voluntary behaviors designed to avoid, escape or hide stuttering and mal-attitude towards speech. It helps clinicians distinguish PWS from PWNS by means other than dysfluency counts (...)" Doody Enterprises, Inc.: "* * * * Four stars from Doody's Review Service!" Ioannis Vogindroukas, Psychiatric Hospital of Thessaloniki, Folia Phoniatrica et Logopaedica, (2008): "The BAB is beautifully presented in a convenient and handy boxed set... This is a very helpful instrument for therapists who work with dysfluency disorders." Patricia Zebrowski and Ellen M. Kelly, Manual of Stuttering Intervention, (2006): "The Communication Attitude Test (...) provides an excellent tool for exploring not only children's attitudes, but also feelings about their communication abilities." Ellen M. Bennett, Working with People Who Stutter, (2006): "The CAT significantly identifies those children with negative speech-associated attitudes... (and) provides insight into the intrapersonal and interpersonal beliefs surrounding communication."
About the Author:
Gene Brutten, Ph.D. Gene J. Brutten, Ph.D., who received his Ph.D. from the University of Illinois, is clinically certified in speech pathology and audiology by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. He is a fellow of the association and has been awarded its certificate of recognition and certificate of appreciation. Professor Brutten is a founding member of the International Fluency Association and served as the editor-in-chief of its Journal of Fluency Disorders from 1989 to 2000. In 1971 and again in 1978, he received a Fulbright-Hays award to the Department of Foniatrie of the University of Utrecht Academic Hospital where he conducted clinically-based research. He co-authored the "Modification of Stuttering," has published more than 70 peer-reviewed journal articles, 20 book chapters, and has given over 200 professional presentations in three continents on differential assessment and behavior therapy. Dr. Brutten is an emeritus professor in the Southern Illinois University Department of Communication Disorders and Sciences, where he served as department chair and in its Department of Psychology. In 2002, Dr. Brutten received the Honors of the American Speech-Language and Hearing Association, and in 2009, he was similarly honored by the International Fluency Association. Martine Vanryckeghem, Ph.D. Martine Vanryckeghem, Ph.D. received her Master's Degree (1991) and Ph.D. (1994) from Southern Illinois University after having worked for 12 years as a speech therapist at a clinical center in Belgium. Dr. Vanryckeghem, who is a professor at the University of Central Florida, is clinically certified as a speech-language pathologist, is an ASHA fellow, and a member of ASHA's Inaugural Cadre of Board Recognized Fluency Specialists and Mentors. She has published widely in peer-reviewed journals and has given workshops, internationally, with respect to the evaluation of children and adults whose fluency is problematic. From 1990 until 2000, she was the managing editor of the Journal of Fluency Disorders and is currently an editorial consultant to professional journals. Dr. Vanryckeghem is on the Scientific Board of the Organization for the Integration of Handicapped People and serves internationally as a consultant to the faculty and staff of various hospital and university-based clinical programs.
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.