VSU Lecture Focuses on Speech-Language Pathologist's Role inTreating Autism
March 19, 2012
12-71
Jessica Pope
Communications and Media Relations Coordinator
VSU Lecture Focuses on Speech-Language Pathologist's Role inTreating Autism
VALDOSTA -- Valdosta State University’s Department of
Communication Sciences and Disorders will host its second annual
Dr. George “Russ” Deavours Lecture Series on Friday, March 23, in
the University Center Magnolia Room.
Dr. Lynn Adams, a nationally certified speech-language pathologist
with more than 25 years of experience working with children with
autism, will present the lecture, “Autism: Speech-Language
Pathologist’s Role, Pivotal Response Training, and Group
Intervention.” An associate professor in VSU’s Department of
Communication Sciences and Disorders, she received bachelor and
master’s degrees from Florida State University and a doctorate
degree from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville. She has
published three books on autism and several journal articles and
was also a contributor to “The Autism Encyclopedia.”
Open to professionals and VSU students, the lecture will be broken
into three 75- to 90-minute sessions. Adams said the first session
will review the role of the speech-language pathologist in the
assessment and treatment of autism. The second session will address
the applied behavior analysis strategy of pivotal response training
that speech-language pathologists use when working with children
with autism. The last session will show attendees how to set up a
group treatment session for those with high-functioning autism and
Asperger syndrome.
The Dr. George “Russ” Deavours Lecture Series benefits VSU’s
on-campus Speech Clinic, which offers hearing evaluations, speech
evaluations, and speech-language therapy to the community. Services
are provided by graduate students and supervised by licensed and
certified speech-language pathologists.
Deavours received a bachelor’s degree from Valdosta State College
in 1965, majoring in sociology and history. He worked as a research
assistant for the United States Air Force and earned a master’s
degree in audiology from New Mexico State University in 1971,
working as an audiologist for the William Beaumont Army Hospital.
He later returned to Valdosta to direct the Speech and Hearing
Clinic that had been founded by the Valdosta Junior Service League
and the college in 1962 and to serve as an assistant professor in
special education. By 1978, he held a doctorate degree in speech
science from the University of Southern Mississippi.
Committed to building the communication disorders program at
Valdosta State, Deavours had a dream come true when the American
Speech-Language-Hearing Association certified the program in 1993
and the Board of Regents of the University System of Georgia
approved a master’s degree option. For the next few years, he
watched the program he had helped build thrive. He had assembled a
large, diverse, and productive faculty and they were educating
students in a modern facility -- the Special Education and
Communication Disorders Building located on the corner of Patterson
Street and Brookwood Drive.
In 2002, Deavours retired as a full professor.
“… (He) has a remarkable history of excellent teaching, important
research, and the capacity to surround himself with dedicated
professionals who loved working for their friend,” according to
lecture series materials provided by VSU’s Department of
Communication Sciences and Disorders. “He has touched the lives of
many.”
For more information, contact Susan Miller in VSU’s Department of
Communication Sciences and Disorders at (229) 219-1305 or sumiller@valdosta.edu.
Newsroom
- Office of Communications Powell Hall West, Suite 1120
-
Mailing Address
1500 N. Patterson St.
Valdosta, GA 31698 - General VSU Information
- Phone: 229.333.5800
- Office of Communications
- Phone: 229.333.2163
- Phone: 229.333.5983