Clinique Rayons et Réadapt

Speech Therapy in Sainte-Therese (children, teens & adults)

At Rayons et Réadapt clinic, we provide speech therapy services to support communication in everyday life: language, speech sounds, stuttering, reading/writing, and more.
Serving Sainte-Therese and nearby areas (Blainville, Rosemere, Boisbriand, Mirabel, Saint-Eustache, Terrebonne, Laval, Montreal), in-clinic or online, and when needed at home, daycare, or school. 

2-minute request — we’ll contact you within 24–48 business hours.

What is speech therapy?

Speech therapy focuses on assessing and supporting communication: language, understanding, speech clarity, fluency (stuttering), voice, and literacy skills (reading/writing).
Our goal is to provide practical strategies that carry over to home, school, work, and social settings.

How It Works

Simple Steps to Lasting Results

Our process is designed to make your journey smooth, clear, and effective. From assessment to follow-up, we ensure each stage brings you closer to your goals.

Assessment

We evaluate needs through questionnaires, discussions, and professional observation.

Personalized Plan

A tailored strategy is created to address your specific challenges.

Ongoing Support

Regular follow-ups to track progress and adjust plans as needed.

Our Approach

We tailor therapy to concrete goals: clearer speech, stronger language skills, improved fluency, a healthier voice, and more effective everyday communication.

Our approach includes:

  • Personalized assessment to identify strengths, needs, and priorities

  • Clear, measurable goals set together and reviewed regularly

  • Engaging, evidence-informed therapy adapted to age and learning style

  • Home practice support with simple, realistic strategies

  • Collaboration with families, schools, and other professionals when helpful

Orthophonie - parole - enfants
Common reasons to consult (What it is / When to consult / How we help)

What it is :
A language delay means a child’s vocabulary, sentence development, or understanding is developing more slowly than expected. It can affect the ability to request, answer, tell stories, and understand everyday directions.

When to consult :

  • Few words (or limited variety of words) and difficulty combining words into sentences

  • Trouble understanding simple directions or questions

  • Frequent frustration, meltdowns, or withdrawal because communication is hard

  • Daycare/school mentions concerns about language development

How we help :

  • A language assessment to identify strengths, needs, and priorities

  • Play-based therapy to build vocabulary, sentence structure, and understanding

  • Practical strategies for home and daycare (modeling, routines, games)

  • Clear measurable goals and regular adjustments based on progress

What it is :
A child makes persistent sound errors (e.g., /k/, /g/, /r/, “sh”) or speech is difficult to understand. Sometimes the child knows what they want to say but can’t produce sounds clearly.

When to consult :

  • People outside the family often have trouble understanding your child

  • Your child avoids certain words, speaks less, or gets upset when misunderstood

  • Errors persist and affect participation at school or social interactions

How we help :

  • Assessment of speech sounds and overall intelligibility

  • Targeted practice (tongue/lip placement, airflow) in words and sentences

  • Carryover into real conversation through games and everyday situations

  • A simple home practice plan to support faster progress

What it is :
Stuttering may involve repetitions (“I-I-I”), prolongations (“mmmm”), or blocks. It can also impact emotions (stress, embarrassment) and lead to avoidance.

When to consult :

  • Stuttering persists, increases, or causes distress

  • A child/teen/adult avoids speaking, changes words, or withdraws socially

  • It affects school, work, or overall confidence

How we help :

  • Fluency assessment plus impact on participation and emotions

  • Personalized strategies (rate, breathing, tension reduction, specific techniques)

  • Tools to increase ease and confidence when speaking

  • Parent coaching (for children) to create a supportive communication environment

What it is :
Difficulty connecting sounds and letters, decoding words, reading smoothly, or understanding what is read. Reading may become slow, tiring, and discouraging.

When to consult :

  • Reading is effortful with frequent errors and slow speed

  • Weak reading comprehension (difficulty answering questions or summarizing)

  • Suspected dyslexia or persistent difficulty despite extra support

  • Avoidance of reading, low motivation, or school anxiety

How we help :

  • A reading profile (decoding, phonological awareness, fluency, comprehension)

  • Targeted intervention: sound-letter skills, decoding strategies, automaticity

  • Comprehension strategies: finding key information, making inferences, summarizing

  • A simple plan to support home and school carryover

What it is :
Difficulty spelling, writing well-formed sentences, organizing ideas, or producing clear texts. Writing can be very demanding and lead to avoidance.

When to consult :

  • Many spelling/grammar errors despite practice, very slow writing

  • Difficulty building sentences or writing a coherent paragraph/text

  • High stress during written tasks and declining school performance

How we help :

  • Assessment of spelling, grammar/syntax, and text organization

  • Strategies for planning, sentence structure, connectors, and revision

  • Practical tools (checklists, templates, visual supports) that work in school settings

  • Step-by-step exercises to build skills and improve independence

What it is :
Dyscalculia is a long-term difficulty with number sense, remembering math facts, and applying procedures. Very often, the language demands of math (word problems, vocabulary, instructions) also make math much harder.

When to consult :

  • Strong difficulty understanding word problems (what the question is asking, key words, steps)

  • Frequent confusion in multi-step procedures and persistent slow progress

  • Difficulties remain despite support and practice

How we help :

  • Clarify the profile: how much is language/comprehension vs math concepts

  • Teach strategies to understand math vocabulary and organize steps

  • Practical tools: highlighting, rewriting the question, diagrams, step checklists

  • Collaboration when helpful with tutoring/special education to reinforce learning

What it is :
An atypical swallow (tongue thrust) is a swallowing pattern where the tongue pushes forward or between the teeth. It often comes with low tongue resting posture, open-mouth posture, or oral habits. It may affect orthodontic outcomes and sometimes speech sounds (often /s/ and /z/).

When to consult :

  • Open-mouth posture at rest; difficulty keeping lips closed

  • Tongue pushes against/between teeth during swallowing

  • Persistent oral habits (thumb sucking, chewing habits)

  • Orthodontic treatment recommended/in progress with tongue posture concerns

  • /s/ or /z/ sounds that remain unstable or “lisp-like”

How we help :

  • Assessment of lip/tongue resting posture, breathing patterns, and swallow pattern

  • Guided exercises for tongue posture, lip strength, and functional swallowing skills

  • A realistic step-by-step home plan

  • Collaboration with dentist/orthodontist when helpful (and ENT referral if significant mouth breathing is suspected)

What it is :
ASD can involve differences in communication (verbal or nonverbal), understanding, interaction, and sensory processing. Needs vary widely between individuals.

When to consult :

  • Few/no words, or language is not functional for everyday communication

  • Difficulty requesting, initiating, responding, or sharing attention

  • Frustration/meltdowns related to communication

  • Need for visual supports or AAC (communication boards/picture systems)

How we help :

  • Functional communication assessment (what will help most in daily life)

  • Goals such as requesting, choices, refusals, commenting, turn-taking, joint attention

  • Visual supports, routines, and parent coaching strategies

  • AAC support when appropriate + collaboration with daycare/school when needed

What it is :
Difficulty using language in social interactions: starting a conversation, taking turns, staying on topic, understanding implied meaning, and adapting to different contexts.

When to consult :

  • Difficulty making friends or maintaining conversations

  • “Monologue” style conversations, repeated misunderstandings

  • Social conflicts or isolation linked to communication at school or work

How we help :

  • Assessment of social communication skills

  • Explicit teaching + role-play + guided real-life practice

  • Tools: conversation scripts, social scenarios, clarification strategies, flexibility skills

  • Collaboration with family/school when appropriate

Start Your Journey today