Speech Therapy - “L“ Words - YakBack Sounds #13

In this video your child will learn how to form the “L“ sound. Yak Back Pack creates engaging content to help kids WANT to learn to speak better. It’s for everyone, but especially for kids who have apraxia, autism, or other speech disorders. There’s a whole bunch of face ice cream scoops placed on a cut-out of paper that looks kind of like an ice cream cone. Guess what? There’s stuff under each of the ice cream cones. Guess what again? It’s stuff that starts with L. Some of it is some lace that looks like it might be of questionable origin. There’s some plastic lips. Theres’s all kinds of cool stuff. But why are you putting up with your kid watching this? Why are you listening to this lady’s mouth in the corner? Here’s why: it works. Your kid with a speech delay, or your kid who has never spoken before is mimicking words at a level you haven’t seen before. And not just any words in the Yak Back videos. We were at the end of our rope trying to find any way to help our kid. We were on a speech therapy waiting list. Then we started making Yak Back videos and everything turned around for our late talker. He’s still got a long road ahead, but he’s talking all the time and making massive progress. And while his baby sister likes these videos better than he does, he genuinely does like them. If we queue them up, he’ll watch them and he’ll respond and speak along. If we watch them side by side, the results are awesome. So if you’re at the end of your rope, what do you have to lose. Run through some Yak Backs. Let these kids learn through repetition. You scream, I scream, we all scream for yak back speech therapy videos about ice cream! Peek under our ice cream cones and discover the fun L sound words waiting for you. This video is a fun at-home way to practice what your child has learned in speech therapy. We all know that children with apraxia or autism may need extra practice with speech therapy. Parents need help helping them. This video makes speech therapy at home enjoyable with your child. Watch the speech video with your child and help the child pronounce the l words. Make speech corrections when needed and make sure to give them lots of praise. The game aspect of these speech videos helps keep preschoolers remain engaged. Engaged minds are learning minds. I know this video has helped my son who has apraxia of speech. I’m hoping it will help autistic children as well. If you have a child with autism let me know if the videos are helping you. Feel free to “yak back“ in the comments down below. Thanks for playing and come back to yak back pack soon!
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