I didn't start wearing corrective lenses until I had turned 21. For years and years (it seems an eternity when you are young - becoming an adult) I had read, read and read some more. I had read at school; at home in every orientation in space; in the library; in the car; and wherever else I could make a book's world my own. There were board books and chapter books; books read aloud, books on cassette and then those portrayed on TV, encouraging me to read them; books out of library stacks that needed immaculate protection, those that were issued by my school and required a pristine look at turn-in; and my own constantly mutating collection of books. It was so much fun to be a reader from an early age. The apocryphal story in my family was that I had learned to read before I finally talked. True or not; I was a reading guy, and it was such a fuel for my life. The tortoise shell frames with my first glasses at 21; - they were just my attempt at a first fashion statement, after being able to read with less eye strain.
Reading is, of course, a discipline that is obligatory to begin and sustain your SLP career. If a clinician-researcher does not master the skills to digest not only the source material for core professional knowledge, but also the allied and supplementary material from fields deemed interprofessional - sharing some knowledge base with SLP - the marketability of the SLP will be marginal. Many in the field want to be specialists, whether that be in autism, augmentative/alternative communication, aphasiology, assistive technology, or additional specialties. Those professionals who want to "drill down" and understand in depth, a narrow focus for professional practice, will have their niche firmly in hand when they read all the necessary literature with fluency. The alternate end of this continuum of professional readers, may hold the generalist who has, out of human nature's demands, some professional strengths but is also prepared to serve anyone who seeks out this practice. Reading by the generalist allows access to knowledge bases across the entire professional spectrum, and in general, superior research skills that facilitate working with all persons having the needs of a well read SLP clinician.
Yet, even beyond the professional reading that the SLP clinician carries as a perpetual responsibility - there is the need and obligation to read for work-life balance, for pleasure, and for growing as a literate professional who can engage with most persons served. I have regularly heard from my fellow students and colleagues, that they do not have time to read outside the professional sphere. I often do not directly respond, but that is because I have had to lift my mandible off the ground and reattach to my jaw. I would go BONKERS BAT CRAZY if I did not pick up newspapers, magazines and books, in addition to all the professional reading I do. Besides feeding my incessant curiosity about the world, reading prepares me to be more like the people I serve. When I have built up my store of general education, I am better prepared to relate well to persons seeking my services; - to find their areas of interest and establish connections based on what the person and I share. So read, read, read, my colleagues - read everything!
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