Daylinda Radley
The Center for Speech, Language, Occupational, and Behavior Therapy, Inc., CSLOT, is a complete diagnostic and therapeutic center for disorders of communication, movement, behavior, and accented. Childhood apraxia of speech is a motor speech disorder that makes it difficult to say certain sounds, syllables and words. This motor planning difficulty is a result of the brain's inability to coordinate appropriate muscle movements of the lips, tongue and jaw that are needed for speech production. Speech therapy is a specialized form of treatment for children and adults who have difficulty communicating, speaking, eating, or swallowing. Not just for the development of young children, speech therapy treats a wide range of speech disorders that alter a person’s ability to vocalize and articulate words. Speech Disorders We Treat. Welcome to CSLOT Since 1980, speech-language pathologists, occupational therapists, and behavior therapists at the Center for Speech, Language, Occupational and Behavior Therapy (CSLOT) have been serving the communication and movement needs of people in the San Francisco Bay Area.
graduated from the University of the Philippines in Manila where she earned her Bachelor of Science degree in Speech Pathology. She was awarded Student Leader of the Year and was one of the nominees for best speech pathology intern of the graduating class in 2000. She went on to complete her Master’s degree in Speech and Language Pathology from San Jose State University in California.
Daylinda completed speech-language pathology internships at Stanford Hospital in Palo Alto, California, and the Center for Speech, Language, and Occupational Therapy in San Jose, followed by a clinical fellowship at Progressive Speech Corporation in Campbell, California. Daylinda was a speech-language pathologist at Evergreen School District in San Jose prior to moving to Helena.
Daylinda has an extensive clinical background having worked as a licensed speech pathologist in hospital, clinical and educational settings. She has been involved in numerous leadership roles and activities including: acting as clinical coordinator for undergraduate student-intern trainings; conducting workshops for families, teachers, school aides and various health professionals; developing and implementing progressive programs (i.e. social skills groups for an elementary school and pediatric hospital; early articulation intervention services) and participating in school district leadership programs (i.e. Response to Intervention program development). She also has written and published several articles relating to communicative disorders and literacy.
Daylinda is strongly motivated in providing innovative speech therapy services to individuals with communicative disorders from early childhood to adulthood. Her areas of expertise and special interests include: developmental language disorders in young children to school-aged populations, bilingual language development and communicative disorders for culturally and linguistically diverse populations, social-cognitive disabilities (i.e. social skills impairment), articulation/phonological disorders, and neurogenic speech & language disorders (i.e. dysarthria, aphasia). She enjoys implementing creative therapeutic activities using technology and practical life-experiences. Her approach is thoughtful as such that she strives to meet best practices and use research-based interventions for her clients. She values the role of her clients and their families, encouraging them to assume active roles in their road to recovery or habilitation.
Daylinda holds the Certificate of Clinical Competency (CCC) from the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA). She has active professional licenses for the state of Montana and California.
Daylinda is married to a Helena native and has two daughters (and a dog) who are being raised to be bilingual. She enjoys being active and usually spends her time outdoors with her family regardless of four season days. She is a big foodie and loves books, musicals, traveling and yoga.
Recent professional development activities include but not limited to…