As a way of celebrating Aphasia Awareness Month, we, in cooperation with Tactus Therapy Solutions, are giving away a copy of Comprehension TherAppy! We have already done a review of this app, and after nearly a year of using it with both our kid and adult clients, this is definitely one app you would love to have in your arsenal.
Contest starts tomorrow, June 15 (Friday), and will end on June 24 (Sunday). All you have to do is log in below via Facebook or using your email, and follow the instructions. Lots of luck!
I would use Comprehension TherAppy to help my daughter’s language. She has Down Syndrome and speech and language are so important for people with Down Syndrome because if they can express themselves well, they will better display their ability and therefore be giving more opportunities.
I like to win this for my wife she has Aphasia
I’m looking forward to using this app with my beginner TEFL students.
This has been on my wishlist for my class for a while. I teach middle schoolers with Autism.
I would use this with my two autistic sons.
We have been looking for quality apps
Ike this for our son. We loved the trial version.
Thanks for the chance to win this app!
This would be great for my 12 year old son with autism! I also teach special education at the middle school level and have a couple of students this would be great for.
I would use it for my son who has autism..thank you!
Thanks for offering this giveaway!
I would like to use this with my students during ABA therapy to strengthen their comprehension skills.
I would use this with many of my students!
I would use this with many students on my caseload at the high school setting!
Love Tactus!
I will use this with adults and children to build vocab and comprehension skills
I would use this with my students in my high school Life Skills class to strengthen their comprehension skills.
As the clinic coordinator for a communication disorders program I would use the app to demonstrate to undergraduate and graduate students how one tool can be used for a variety of populations and disorders.
This would be great for my dad who has Parkinson’s disease and for students at school