What You Need To Do To Qualify For Speech Pathology Continuing Education

Speech pathology continuing education is available to anyone who has successfully completed a course and qualified as a speech pathologist or audiology professional. Although the initial training and study needed to qualify for these professions is long, hard, and demanding, there is still the need to keep learning after the initial study is over. This is a seriously complex career, and those who manage to complete the arduous initial training will find that it can offer a varied and diverse working experience. In order to cope with the enormous variety of cases you will be dealing with, it can do no harm to give yourself the chance to further your education while you start to practice.


When you set out on the road to becoming a speech pathologist, you are undertaking years of study with no guaranteed result. The extremely tough requirements for qualification are laid down by the American Speech Language Hearing Association, even though it is the individual states which control and regulate the industry. The first requirement is that you take a post graduate study course which will last for a full two years. During this time, you will be learning in a theory situation, and not practising on any real patients.

The post graduate study period needs to be this long because of the complexity of the job, and the many different types of case which you will have to deal with. Once you have completed this, you will then enter the most important year of your career. You will be carrying out actual work on real patients, under the supervision of a trained professional with years of experience. During this year of supervision, you will be gaining experience of the many different types of case you will have to treat in your career. This year of supervision will tell you once and for all whether or not you have the capability to follow speech pathology as a career.

Assuming you make it through this year, and then pass the written examination which follows at the end of it, you will then be able to enter private practice as a speech pathologist. At this stage, your skills will be enough to allow you to earn a full time living, but in the field of speech pathology, your learning experience never ends. Continuing your education with an approved Continuing Education Provider of the American Speech Language Hearing Association (ASHA) will allow you to keep learning as your practice continues, and will allow you to keep up to date with the latest developments.

If you choose an approved course, you will be continuing your education in a way approved by the state licensing authority. If you pass the examination with a high enough mark, you will be eligible to receive a certificate from the American Speech Language Hearing Association themselves. This type of added certification can only help if you wish to become affiliated with an established professional. Doing so can help you establish your practice far quicker than you would on your own. The certificate is just one of many reasons for speech pathology continuing education.

 

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