10 Things to Tell Parents When You Dismiss from Speech (2025)

10 Things to Tell Parents When You Dismiss from Speech (1)

What to Tell Parents

Dismissal from speech therapy feels like a huge celebration for both the student and the speech pathologist. But some parents don’t see it that way. Parents may not feel ready to let the child leave speech therapy. I’ve seen this many times. Here the things that I tell parents at dismissal time so that they feel on the same page as me…

10 Things to Tell Parents

1) Speech Therapy Worked!

When I first became a speech pathologist in Chicago public schools, I was working with the lead speech pathologist to evaluate a student who was coming out of the early intervention. The student presented with no speech impairment at all during the evaluation. Thespeech pathologist talked to the parent during the eligibility meeting and said you know early intervention worked. There’s no speech impairment anymore, how fantastic! It’s important to tell parents that speech therapy works and it fixed the concern that the child had.

2) Eligibility is Three Years Long

One speech eligibility does not mean speech therapy will continue for all of elementary school. It’s sometimes hard for parents to realize that eligibility for speech therapyis not perpetual. The initial eligibility can qualify students for speech therapy for up to three years but after that point it’s time to redo the eligibility and a student might not qualify.

3) Back to the General Education Setting

The best place for kids to be at school is in the classroom. Even coming out for speech therapy once a week for30 minutes a week is still missed instructional time. Just because parents want their child to get speech therapy doesn’t mean that they aren’t missing something in the classroom. Being in the classroom could be more important to their education than speech therapy if they’ve reached their goals.

4) “Taking advantage of all the services available”

One thing I heard when I wanted to dismiss a student was that theparents said,“I want my kid to continue in speech therapy because I want to take advantage of all the services available for my child.” Well, speech therapy is not like gym, music, library, or computer class. It’s an eligibility for special education; it’s not enrichment. Instead, it’s a service to help the student reach communication success. Once they reach their goals, they should be removed from speech therapy and participate fully in the general education environment.

5) Graduation from speech!

When we frame speech therapy termination as a graduation, I have found that many parentsand students feel very happy and excited about that. It’s something that I like to do when I’m working with families is to discuss dismissal as a graduation from many years of being in speech therapy. Itis supposed to be a happy time. I’ve seen parents cry tears of relief because they’re ready for their child to be out of speech therapy.

6) Language modeling from peers

Itell parents thatbeing in the classroom with their peer models is valuable. Sometimes what kids really need is interaction and group socialization that they won’t get in speech therapy class. I tell parents that while the intervention that a speech pathologist provides is beneficial, it can be equally beneficial forkids to bein a classroom getting the language modeling from typical peers.

7) Backsliding back into speech therapy?

Many parents worry about their child backsliding after dismissal from speech. As if somehow thestudent will be unable to sustain the level of mastery that they’ve achieved in speech therapy and they will backslide into needing services again. So parents’ rationale is essentially “why not just keep them on and forget about dismissal?” What I tell parents when they’re worried about backsliding is we need to just move forward with giving it a shot in the regular education classroom. I tell parents that if there is some kind of backsliding I could potentially pull the child for a refresher in a speech RTI group.

8) Your Child Wants This

Parents need to know that some children want to leave speech therapy. They worked hard, they achieved their goals, and they don’t want to go anymore. As we endeavor to be more child-centered, we need to take their opinions into consideration as well.

9) Involve Administration

When the parents arelegitimately upset about their child being removed from speech therapy, it’s time to involve administration. I’ve had the principal at one of my schools in a meeting that I was concerned about. I wanted to dismiss the child from speech therapy, but there were some social skills concerns with the student. The student had reached all thespeech and language goals; any of the social concerns would not have been addressed in additional speech therapy classes. Maybe the student just needed additional practice in the general education environment or in something like a lunch group. The principal suggested that the social worker take thestudent in a group to work on social skills. Every team member felt great about this decision. This idea was totally the principal’s idea. Principals and other administrators can think outside the box and may have a solution that has not occurred to you.

10) Consultative Services or Speech RTI

If you can’t get an agreement on the team, you can offer one of two things. Consultative services means the student remains with an IEP but no direct minutes. “Indirect minutes” means that the SLP consults with the teacher about the student’s progress with their communication skills in the classroom. So it’s like monitoring and I can help parents get closer towards being comfortable with leaving speech therapy for good. Or you could consider putting them into a speech RTI group. So the student does not have an eligibility for speech therapy and so they don’t have anIEP, but the studentcould still potentially come to see you as on an “as needed” basis.

I hope my ideas have helped you when you have to tackle the issue of dismissal with parents. Feel free to comment or email me if you have additional concerns you might have.

10 Things to Tell Parents When You Dismiss from Speech (2)

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10 Things to Tell Parents When You Dismiss from Speech (2025)

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