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HSLS Department Strategic Plan
Gallaudet’s 2011 SLP Graduates Complete their Clinical Fellowship Year!
The Hearing, Speech, and Language Sciences Department is proud to announce that ALL 2011 speech-language pathology graduates have successfully completed their Clinical Fellowship Year (CFY) and passed their Praxis in Speech-Language Pathology examination, entitling them to their “Cs,” the Certificate of Clinical Competence (CCC-SLP). Certification by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association enables speech-language pathologists to practice as independent clinicians. Certification is also necessary in many states for licensure as a speech-language pathologist.
The 12 students completed their CFYs in a variety of settings:
5 Hospitals: Mount Vernon Hospital in Alexandria, Virginia; the Veteran’s Administration Hospital in DC; Doctor’s Community Hospital in Greenbelt, Maryland; Abington Memorial Hospital in Philadelphia; and Cass County Memorial Hospital in Atlantic, Iowa
4 Schools: Virginia School for the Deaf and Blind in Staunton; The Learning Center for the Deaf in Framingham, Massachusetts; The River School in DC; and Montgomery County Schools in Maryland
3 Rehabilitation Centers/Contractors: ManorCare Rehabilitation Facility in Indianapolis, Indiana; RehabCare Group in Knoxville, Tennessee; and Chesapeake Center in Springfield, Virginia
They will now write their professional signatures with M.S., CCC-SLP.
About the Department
The Hearing, Speech, and Language Sciences Department at Gallaudet University is accredited by the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association. The Department serves many functions and responsibilities within the University by:
- Providing graduate training in Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, and Hearing, Speech, and Language Sciences;
- Offering a range of clinical services to the Gallaudet and metropolitan DC communities;
- Offering undergraduate courses relating to speech, hearing and consumerism, and graduate courses in audiology and amplification to other departments on campus;
- Supporting research aimed at a broad range of areas affecting deaf and hard of hearing individuals.
The Department offers the following degrees: a M.S. in Speech-Language Pathology, a non-clinical M.S. in Hearing, Speech, and Language Sciences, an Au.D. in Audiology, Ph.D. in Hearing, Speech, and Language Sciences.
The Department's M.S. program in speech-language pathology provides a broad background in speech-langauage-hearing development, differences, and discorders with an emphasis on the communication needs of deaf and hard of hearing individuals. The non-clinical M.S. in HSLS is an individually-designed degree with masters level course work without a clinical focus.
The audiology degree program (Au.D.) is designed to produce audiologists fully trained to work with hard of hearing and deaf individuals, offering a broad and intense academic curriculum and an integrated sequential clinical experience. The program is unique in that it trains audiologists to be proficient in American Sign Language with an understanding of the deaf community.
The department also offers a Ph.D. program that prepares post-masters SLPs and AUDs for faculty teaching and research positions in universities and other research facilities.
Our Mission
The multi-faceted mission of the Department of Hearing, Speech, and Language Sciences is to:
- prepare the next generation of well-qualified speech-language pathologists and audiologists, who meet the requirements for professional licensure and/or certification, and meet Gallaudet’s language and communication expectations, to provide the full range of speech, language, and hearing services to individuals of all ages from diverse language, cultural, and communication backgrounds, with particular focus on individuals who are deaf or hard of hearing,
- prepare the next generation of college and university Ph.D. faculty who are culturally sensitive, knowledgeable, and skilled in preparing future audiologists to work with culturally and linguistically diverse deaf and hard of hearing individuals of all ages,
- provide competent, culturally-sensitive, and communication-accessible speech, language, aural rehabilitation, and hearing services for the Gallaudet community and the Washington D.C. metropolitan area,
- conduct research to inform practice and advance speech, hearing, and language sciences,
- assist Gallaudet graduate programs in related fields by offering coursework with relevant knowledge about audiology, speech language pathology and aural rehabilitation to professional specialists in related fields who will be working with clients who are deaf and hard of hearing, and
- provide undergraduate students with coursework and other experiences aimed at furthering their awareness and understanding of themselves as Deaf or hard of hearing people and to provide information aimed at reducing the communication challenges confronted by deaf individuals in a broad range of situations.
- advocate for meeting the language, communication, and cultural needs of deaf and hard of hearing individuals in all of our various professional organizations, and to promote this sense of advocacy in our students.
- actively participate in our professions, through involvement with professional organizations concerned with the promotion and improvement of the professions of audiology and speech-language pathology.
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