Summary of "5 CONSEILS pour un(e) ETUDIANT(E) EN ORTHOPHONIE"
Summary of "5 CONSEILS pour un(e) ETUDIANT(E) EN orthophonie"
This video offers five practical tips for students studying speech therapy (orthophonie), aimed at making their studies and internships more manageable and effective. The speaker draws from personal experience, acknowledging the challenges of speech therapy studies but emphasizing strategies to succeed and prepare for professional life.
Main Ideas and Lessons
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Keep and Organize All Your Notes and Lessons
- Save all your course materials in categorized binders (e.g., oral language, written language, neurological disabilities).
- Organizing notes helps prepare for exams and serves as a valuable reference for future professional work.
- Even if you think you won’t work in a certain area (e.g., swallowing disorders), keeping notes can be useful later.
- Maintaining these binders provides a solid knowledge base and aids in adapting to different work environments.
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Take Useful and Structured Notes During Internships
- Keep detailed notes not only on patient sessions but especially on how your internship supervisors work.
- Focus on:
- Questions asked during anamnesis (patient history taking).
- Materials and tools used by supervisors.
- How therapeutic materials can be adapted for different objectives.
- Avoid taking notes that only record what the patient does or superficial session details.
- Organize notes by pathology or intervention area rather than by individual sessions or games.
- These notes will be more valuable for your future practice.
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Explore and Learn About Other Related Professions
- Use your studies and internships as opportunities to observe other healthcare professionals (psychomotor therapists, occupational therapists, orthoptists, neuropsychologists, hypnotherapists, etc.).
- Attend conferences or arrange short visits if possible.
- Understanding other professionals’ roles helps clarify your own role and improves interdisciplinary collaboration.
- This broader knowledge enriches your perspective and prepares you for real-world teamwork.
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Assert Yourself During Training
- Do not apologize for being a student or for not knowing everything.
- Communicate openly with your supervisors:
- Express discomfort with certain tasks or patients.
- Discuss workload issues.
- Share updated knowledge or differing theoretical perspectives.
- Internship supervisors are not infallible; constructive dialogue benefits both parties.
- It’s your right and duty to engage actively and critically in your training.
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Remember You Will Have Professional Freedom After Graduation
- Once qualified, you will be able to practice as you see fit within professional and ethical guidelines.
- You won’t be obliged to follow every method or approach imposed during training.
- Although the studies are long, difficult, and sometimes discouraging, the freedom and fulfillment after graduation make it worthwhile.
Summary of the 5 Tips (Methodology)
- Tip 1: Keep all your lessons and organize them by category in binders for easy review and future reference.
- Tip 2: Take useful, detailed notes during internships focusing on supervisors’ methods and adaptable materials, organized by pathology or intervention type.
- Tip 3: Take the initiative to observe and learn about other related health professions to broaden your understanding and collaboration skills.
- Tip 4: Be assertive in your training; communicate openly with supervisors about your limits, opinions, and updated knowledge.
- Tip 5: Know that after graduation, you have the freedom to practice according to your own professional judgment within ethical and legal boundaries.
Speakers/Sources Featured
- Main Speaker: The video’s narrator (unnamed speech therapy graduate sharing personal experience and advice).
- Mentioned Intern: Mathilde (an intern who took exemplary notes, referenced but not featured).
- Other Professionals Mentioned: psychomotor therapists, occupational therapists, orthoptists, neuropsychologists, hypnotherapists (as examples of related professions to explore).
This video is a motivational and practical guide for speech therapy students, emphasizing organization, active learning, professional exploration, self-advocacy, and future professional autonomy.
Category
Educational