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DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1708926
Self-Assessment Questions
Publication History
Publication Date:
10 March 2020 (online)
This section provides a review. Mark each statement on the Answer Sheet according to the factual materials contained in this issue and the opinions of the authors.
Article One (pp. 125–142)
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In the United States, which of the following is the most common etiology for traumatic brain injury (TBI) in young children?
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Motor vehicle accidents.
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Falls.
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Sports-related injuries.
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Being struck by or against an object.
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Assault.
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Which of the following evidence-based treatment plans should a speech-language pathologist (SLP) perform for a young child who has sustained a TBI?
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A motor speech assessment.
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A neurodevelopmental assessment.
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A language assessment.
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A cognitive communication assessment.
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A comprehensive assessment, which includes the above assessments as well as caregiver report and other relevant measures.
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In accordance with evidence-based outcomes, which outcomes can occur in individuals who sustain a TBI in early childhood?
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Difficulties maintaining developmental expectations.
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Long-term disability.
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Difficulties with cognitive and executive functioning skills.
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Difficulties with social and language skills.
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All of the above.
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Which of the following is associated with poorer long-term outcomes for individuals who sustain a TBI in early childhood?
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Milder injury severity.
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Higher socioeconomic status.
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Higher preinjury functioning.
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History of multiple TBIs.
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Receipt of long-term supports and services postinjury.
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Speech-language pathology treatment for individuals with a history of early childhood TBI should be based on which of the following?
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The client's individual strengths and needs.
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Available research evidence.
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Comprehensive assessment of skills upon referral.
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Continuous monitoring and assessment of performance across the individual's academic career, as necessary.
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All of the above.
Article Two (pp. 143–160)
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Social communication refers to:
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Being aware of when someone is joking or using sarcasm.
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The cognitive processes that are engaged when a person attempts to make sense of interpersonal and social cues, such that they can understand, and thus predict the behavior of others and communicate.
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The ability to pay attention in conversation.
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The use of language within social contexts, encompassing social interaction, pragmatics, and language processing, and including other more general social cognitive skills.
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All of the above.
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Joint attention is defined as:
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The ability to coordinate one's attention with that of another person, resulting in shared common points of reference.
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Having both communication partners talking about the same thing.
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Paying attention to two things at one time.
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Being able to block out distractions.
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Being able to picture the contents of your desk drawer.
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Gender refers to:
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The biological and physiological characteristics that distinguish males from females.
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The types of books a person prefers to read.
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Choosing pink as a favorite color.
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The socially constructed roles, relationships, behaviors, relative power, and other traits that societies ascribe to women and men.
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Playing sports.
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Which of the following best describes current preferred practices in the assessment of social communication skills?
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Utilizing standardized assessment tools only, and relying on normative data to establish therapy goals.
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Completing a caregiver interview and establishing therapy goals based on this interview.
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Observing the child/adolescent at school as he/she interacts with the teacher.
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Collaborative, multidisciplinary approach that utilizes parent/caregiver/ child report, clinical observation of constructs of social communication across time/settings, and standardized assessment, when available.
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Gathering information from a peer about specific behavioural complaints.
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Which of the following is the most appropriate setting for social communication intervention for adolescents with a brain injury?
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Online/video.
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With peers and support and scaffolding.
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One-on-one with their therapist.
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From a book/reading.
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At a party, independently.
Article Three (pp. 161–169)
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Children with brain injury present challenges to front-line clinicians because:
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Children with TBI have such severe impairments that returning to traditional school is often not possible.
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The severity of the deficits associated with TBI is widely variable and not all children receive hospital to school transition support.
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Children with mild TBI are over identified and do not need the level of services recommended.
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Children who have TBI have a better recovery trajectory because of neuroplasticity and so do not need the level of service that adults with TBI need.
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Children who have TBI have immediate presentation of deficits and so do not need support by the time they return to school.
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Executive function deficits may present in the classroom as:
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Falling asleep during class.
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Difficulty verbalizing during conversation.
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Difficulty completing work independently.
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Difficulty with light sensitivity.
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Worsening headache throughout the school day.
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Returning to school can be difficult for a student after TBI because:
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Deficits are often “silent” and complex to identify.
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Deficits are so severe that even maximal classroom modifications may not be successful.
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Teachers will work only with the student rather than discussing concerns with the SLP.
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Parents request too many modifications.
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Wrap-around services are providing too many supports to students.
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The SLPs' assessment for a student with TBI should include:
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Observation/Interview.
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Standardized assessment.
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Functional, nonstandardized assessment.
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Data obtained from several sources.
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All of the above.
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The SLP's engagement with the student should be:
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Ongoing to allow for monitoring over time for appearance of new challenges as classroom expectations change.
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Short-term during the medical to school transition.
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Short-term during the first year after the student returns to school.
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On a consultation basis only.
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Long-term monitoring only during the high-school transition process.
Article Four (pp. 170–182)
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Which of the following language domains is most commonly affected by cognitive-communication impairment?
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Phonology.
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Naming.
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Sentence-level syntax.
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Pragmatics.
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Morphology.
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Which of the following has been identified as a major weakness of standardized tests of cognition?
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Small norming samples.
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Poor inter-rater reliability.
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Poor reflection of everyday, real-world activities.
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Excessive length and complexity.
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Inconsistent administration procedures.
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Which of the following is not considered a form of nonstandardized assessment?
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Dynamic assessment.
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Norm-referenced assessment.
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Discourse analysis.
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Curriculum-based assessment.
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Task analysis.
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Which of the following would be an example of curriculum-based assessment that an SLP might use to evaluate a student with pTBI?
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Reading sentences and asking the student to repeat them.
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Asking a student to point to a named picture in a field of four.
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Observing a student taking notes during a social studies lecture.
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Assessing vocabulary by asking the student to name pictures.
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Recording a student's misarticu-lated phonemes while naming pictures.
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Which of the following would not be an example of discourse analysis that an SLP might use to evaluate a student with pTBI?
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Asking a student to write the definition of vocabulary words.
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Observing a student giving an oral presentation in class.
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Assessing a student's written science report for vocabulary, main idea, and appropriate text structure.
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Asking a student to verbally summarize a chapter she just finished reading in an assigned novel.
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Evaluating a student's written narrative for appropriate story grammar elements.
Article Five (pp. 183–194)
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When designing a treatment plan for a child or adolescent with a cognitive-communication disorder, it is important to consider:
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Individual factors such as age of onset, injury severity, and current developmental age.
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Emotional changes postinjury.
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Physical impairments, including motor speech disorders.
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Communicative competence in a variety of contextual domains including school, home, and social settings.
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All of the above.
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Which of the following is not true about interventions that support fundamental processes?
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Can be considered a bottom-up approach to treatment.
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Address discrete cognitive skills such as attention, processing speed, or memory.
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Can be effective for treating specific cognitive-communication impairments.
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May better generalize when mixed with other intervention methods.
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Are often strategy-based approaches.
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A top-down approach to cognitive-communication remediation promotes goal-oriented processes or integrated skills, whereas a bottom-up approach typically focuses on improving:
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Internally driven processes.
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A discrete skill or process.
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Generalization of skills.
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Synthesis of information.
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Higher-order functions.
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The first step in modifying the communication environment is:
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Drill and practice.
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Direct attention training.
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Observing the child's behaviors in context and describing the problem.
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Bringing in multiple visual aids.
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None of the above.
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Carryover/generalization of strategies can be promoted through:
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Drilling a specific skill.
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Selecting activities contrary to the student's interests.
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Engaging the student's everyday communication partners.
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Gradual increase of supports and prompts.
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All of the above.
Article Six (pp. 195–208)
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Which of the following best describes the effect of pediatric TBI as compared to adult TBI?
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Children typically recover more completely and quickly than adults after TBI, regardless of severity.
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Adults tend to need more therapy after TBI than children.
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Children are at particular risk for complicated recovery from TBI, including mTBI, compared to adults.
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Children are more likely to complain about their injury and therefore receive more care than adults.
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Adults rarely sustain mTBIs, so it is difficult to compare the effects of the injury across ages.
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What are current recommendations for rest following pediatric mTBI?
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1 to 2 days of rest, followed by return to moderate levels of activity.
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Complete rest until no symptoms are experienced and all neurocognitive testing has returned to baseline.
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Complete rest for 1 month.
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No rest restrictions are currently recommended; the child can return to activity immediately.
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Rest recommendations depend on whether or not this is the first or subsequent injury.
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What is the current expected timeline to recovery following pediatric mTBI?
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7 to 10 days.
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2 weeks.
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4 weeks.
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6 months.
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1 year.
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Which of the following is the best example of stable, foundational knowledge?
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Risk factors.
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Assessment practices.
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Treatment approaches.
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Individual recovery.
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Basic neuroanatomy.
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Educational initiatives improve implementation of best evidence when:
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There is a personal element to it, like learning with or from a peer, and receiving ongoing coaching and feedback over time.
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Information is presented quickly.
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There is pressure from administration to meet benchmarks.
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A clinician reads a textbook.
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The person is still in graduate school.
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