Marketplace

Related Articles

More

Related Categories

More

Recently Added

More

Join StudyUp.com Today

It's always free and anyone can join!

Watch StudyUp Demo Video Now

You Recently Visited

Study Speech Therapy

Alex Said:

does anyone study speech and language therapy at unoversity?

We Answered:

What's a unoversity?

Frederick Said:

study speech therapy or law?

We Answered:

well really you just want to pursue the one you are more passionate about, because you will most likely be doing that for most of your life. However i think Law is more respected, money and challenging. and of course if you like it, it will be enjoyable. But you must go after what you really like.

Corey Said:

What is the best country outside of America for studying speech therapy?

We Answered:

Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, and Great Britain all have well-repected speech pathology programs. I would avoid South Africa because unemployment and violent crime are really bad there, thus making your life outside of school scary.
Be aware that SLPs are usually called "logopaedists" outside of the US and Canada.
In Sweden, most classes are in English, and the textbooks typically are, too. At Stockholm University, logopeds are trained at the medical school, and practice in hospitals and nursing homes.
There is a separate, education-based program in Sweden for "talpedagogs", or "speech teachers". It is a bachelor's level program for school practitioners.

Glenn Said:

should i study speech therapy or psychology?

We Answered:

I think speach therapy. Psychology is the no. 1 most popular major in the US and there are lots of them. You need a masters or doctorate to get a good job.

Jimmy Said:

Should i study speech therapy or psychology?

We Answered:

What is it you WANT to do? What is your passion? What does your soul want? No one can answer that for you, only you.....pyschology...may I recommend a little reading for you? Joseph Campbell, his work speaks to my soul and may perhaps be of assistance to you...

"But if a person has had the sense of the Call -- the feeling that there's an adventure for him -- and if he doesn't follow that, but remains in the society because it's safe and secure, then life dries up. And then he comes to that condition in late middle age: he's gotten to the top of the ladder, and found that it's against the wrong wall.
If you have the guts to follow the risk, however, life opens, opens, opens up all along the line. I'm not superstitious, but I do believe in spiritual magic, you might say. I feel that if one follows what I call one's "bliss" -- the thing that really gets you deep in your gut and that you feel is your life -- doors will open up. They do! They have in my life and they have in many lives that I know of.
…When you are at a certain age…and look back over your life, it seems to be almost as orderly as a composed novel. And just as in Dickens' novels, little accidental meetings and so forth turn out to be main features in the plot, so in your life. And what seem to have been mistakes at the time, turn out to be directive crises…
Life seems as though it were planned; and there is something in us that's causing what you hear of as being accident prone: it's something in ourselves. There is a mystery here… Can anything happen to you for which you're not ready? I look back now on certain things that at the time seemed to be real disasters, but the results turned out to be the structuring of a really great aspect of my life and career. So what can you say?
And the other point is, if you follow your bliss, you'll have your bliss, whether you have money or not. If you follow money, you may lose money, and then you don't have even that. The secure way is really the insecure way and the way in which the richness of the quest accumulates is the right way." ~Joseph Campbell

Discuss It!