I am guilty of leaving zoom lectures when the prof. decides to call on students to answer randomly... that's just to suspenseful for me.
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I am guilty of leaving zoom lectures when the prof. decides to call on students to answer randomly... that's just to suspenseful for me.
Jobs in linguistics
Does anyone know any other jobs for people with a bacherlor’s degree in linguistics? Or anything from the ones I know of?
These are the options I have explored:
- Language teacher/ specially ESL
- Speech Language Pathologist (SLP) or Speech Language Pathologist Assistant (SLPA)
- Natural Language Processing Engineer/ Computational Linguist
- Translator and/or Interpreter
- Editor/proofreader/copywriter
- University professor/Academia
- Lexicographer
- Data linguist
- Forensic Linguist
- Fieldwork / Language documentation and revitalization
I’m starting my senior year and still don’t have it very clear as to what I want to do after I graduate.
I welcome any stories, opinions, references, knowledge, resources...
I’m looking to know the following things of these careers or others that you might know of:
- Salary and job opportunities. Are job offers scarce?
- Work environment. Is it an office job? Individual vs teamwork? Do I get to work with other people?
- Challenges of it.
- Educational requirements. Do I need a certification, PhD, masters?
I love being a speech therapist because sometimes there's these amazing moments of kids getting it and improving
And then there's just really fucking funny moments.
Today I was working with a kid who is working on articulation (i.e. making the right speech sounds more or less) and they have trouble with /s/ and typically replace it with /f/
I have a game where the pieces are magnetic and at the end there's a magnetic wand you wave over the board and it picks up the pieces and kids go nuts for it
This particular kid was gleefully picking up the pieces with the wand and was amazed by the wand and proudly exclaimed "It sucks it up!" or so they tried to say
Try keeping a straight face when a 5 year old happily yells "It fucks it up!"
Introduction
Hello Fellow Speechies and SLP-As,
I am an SLPA student at a local community college in Southern California. I am 31 years old. My first BA was in Psychology & Social Behavior. I have recently enrolled as a 2nd BA student at Eastern New Mexico University. The program is fully online.
I am also a stay at home with a toddler who has severe mixed receptive/expressive and articulation disorder.
I would love to connect other people in the field of Speech-Pathology. There are many resources provided by SLPs but I feel that there isn’t much out there for SLPAs. I will be documenting my journey into this field. I will also be using this blog for study motivation.
I hope you will click that “Follow” button!
Feel free to message me :)
Traveling speech therapist assistant aka SLPA.
There’s always toys in the trunk and gas in tank ✌🏽
My internship ended last Thursday!
Thursdays are typically the busiest days we have in terms of clients and this was definitely true last Thursday. As a result...I did not get time to say goodbye to any of my familiar kiddos :( My supervisor was so sweet and told me I could come back and visit anytime. Now I’m trying to get my SLPA licensing paperwork in order...and getting started on grad apps!
internship update
The kids I’m working with are adorable, complicated, stubborn, innocent, funny, smart....all the good things. I don’t have even the slightest problem empathizing with them and although they are challenging I am really enjoying working the junior high school kids so far. The school i am interning at is an inclusion school meaning they have a mixture of regular education students and kids with moderate to severe disabilities. It’s really great getting to explore the world of special education and still get to work the other speech kids.
speechie things. Learning new stuff every day