The Complete Guide to Adult Speech Therapy Assessments

Welcome to the Complete Guide to Adult Speech Therapy Assessments!

This guide lays out exactly what you should assess, based on your patient’s disorder. It covers how to assess swallowing, expressive and receptive language, cognition, visual neglect, motor speech, voice, resonance, AAC, and fluency.

To make your life easier, we link to every assessment, screening, and resource we mention so that you don’t have to hunt them down.

Popular Articles

Assessing Swallowing

Swallowing Assessments

How to Assess Swallowing

PO Trials: Liquids and Solids.

For each trial, measure and record the amount, cup/spoon/straw use, response, strategies, and duration. Printable guide.

More Swallowing Resources

Assessing Expressive & Receptive Language

There are several formal batteries specific to aphasia. Many cognitive-linguistic evaluations also have sections that cover language expression, comprehension, reading, and/or writing.

Keep in mind that formal batteries tend to be more time-consuming and expensive than informal evals. Some settings require a formal battery and provide test kits and paper forms to their therapists—while others will expect you to find and print your own assessments.

Know your setting’s expectations and your patient’s needs and insurance constraints when choosing assessments.

Language Assessments

Informal Cognitive-Linguistic Evaluations

Formal Batteries

How to Assess Expressive Language

More Expressive Language Resources

How to Assess Receptive Language

For example: “I am going to read a paragraph then ask you some questions about it. Please answer each question with ‘yes’ or ‘no’.”

More Receptive Language Resources

Assessing Cognition

You have many options for assessing cognition. In addition to formal batteries, there are quite a few free, standardized cognitive screens and assessments to choose from.

Consider what’s best for you, your patient, and your specific setting when deciding whether to invest the time and money required to complete a formal battery. Consider using screens, parts of formal cognitive evaluations, and/or informal cognitive-linguistic evaluations.

Know your setting’s expectations and your patient’s needs and insurance constraints when choosing assessments.

Cognitive Assessments

Cognitive Screens

Organization and sequencing