Review of A Trip to The Land of Funny Animals: Oral Motor and Myofunctional Exercises for Toddlers by Hilit Brown
Abstract
:- Strengths
- This book is nicely illustrated with appealing colors and vibrancy.
- It has a diverse cast of characters with ethnic diversity. Children of various races and ethnicity will feel included.
- The oral motor illustrations are exaggerated and “silly,” which appeals to young children in the author’s target audience.
- There are targets for jaw, lips, cheeks and tongue which covers many muscle groups.
- The book encourages joint attention (mutual focus to one activity), attention to the orofacial complex, imitation, and oral sensory awareness.
- The book supports the proper labial and lingual placements on a straw. Straws are common tools in orofacial myology that support jaw stability, lip rounding and tongue retraction and can be used to mitigate myofunctional concerns in younger populations.
- In the “Crocodile Johnny” section, there is a note on how to properly execute the task. This is helpful as parents may not know what to look for.
- The author’s inclusion of specific exercises considers the scope of practice in orofacial myology such as strength and resistance training and swallowing.
- Weaknesses
- If the parent is performing the exercises incorrectly, without jaw-lip-tongue dissociation or with compensations, the book will not be goal directed (Marshalla, 2020).
- The book lacks guidance on how to do most of the exercises correctly. The above referenced “Crocodile Johnny” was not consistent throughout the publication.
- While the author’s book description targets myofunctional targets, some exercises are extraneous oral motor tasks and seem to fall under the rubric of non-speech oral motor Exercises (NSOME), which have been previously criticized in the literature (Bahr & Rosenfeld-Johnson, 2010).
- The book suggests a “stick” and a trick of “shoving the stick right in”. The reviewer was confused regarding the goal of this task and how to do the task, and was worried that this could be dangerous.
- The stick was mentioned again with the giraffe for assisting elevating the tongue outside of the mouth. Oral motor exercises outside of the mouth can also be viewed as an NSOME. The task would be more goal directed if the tongue was lifted to the palate, or tongue tip to the alveolar ridge in a more specific fashion for myofunctional goals such as: lingual alveolar phonemes, tongue to the spot or improved oral resting posture.
- The book is missing page numbers, making it challenging to refer to a specific task listed in the story.
References
- Bahr, D., and S. Rosenfeld-Johnson. 2010. Treatment of children with speech oral placement disorders (OPDs): A paradigm emerges. Communication Disorders Quarterly 31: 131–138. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Brown, H. 2022. A Trip to The Land of Funny Animals–Oral Motor and Myofunctional Exercises for Toddlers (K. Berenshtein, Illus.). Amazon Digital Services LLC. [Google Scholar]
- Merkel-Walsh, R. 2020. Orofacial myofunctional therapy with children ages 0-4 and individuals with special needs. International Journal of Orofacial Myology and Myofunctional Therapy 46, 1: 22–36. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Marshalla, P. 2008. Oral Motor Treatment vs. Non-speech Oral Motor Exercises. Oral Motor Institute 2, 2. Available from www.oralmotorinstitute.org.
- Marshalla, P. 2020. The Marshalla Guide: A Topical Anthology of Speech Movement Techniques. Ashland, OR: Marshalla Speech and Language. [Google Scholar]
- Morris, S., and M. Klein. 2000. Pre-feeding skills, 2nd ed. San Antonio, TX: Therapy Skill Builders. [Google Scholar]
- Overland, L. 2010. A sensory-motor approach to feeding. Perspectives on Swallowing and Swallowing Disorders (Dysphagia) 20, 3: 60–64. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
© 2022 by the author. 2022 Robyn Merkel-Walsh.
Share and Cite
Merkel-Walsh, R. Review of A Trip to The Land of Funny Animals: Oral Motor and Myofunctional Exercises for Toddlers by Hilit Brown. Int. J. Orofac. Myol. Myofunct. Ther. 2022, 48, 1-2. https://doi.org/10.52010/ijom.2022.48.1.3
Merkel-Walsh R. Review of A Trip to The Land of Funny Animals: Oral Motor and Myofunctional Exercises for Toddlers by Hilit Brown. International Journal of Orofacial Myology and Myofunctional Therapy. 2022; 48(1):1-2. https://doi.org/10.52010/ijom.2022.48.1.3
Chicago/Turabian StyleMerkel-Walsh, Robyn. 2022. "Review of A Trip to The Land of Funny Animals: Oral Motor and Myofunctional Exercises for Toddlers by Hilit Brown" International Journal of Orofacial Myology and Myofunctional Therapy 48, no. 1: 1-2. https://doi.org/10.52010/ijom.2022.48.1.3
APA StyleMerkel-Walsh, R. (2022). Review of A Trip to The Land of Funny Animals: Oral Motor and Myofunctional Exercises for Toddlers by Hilit Brown. International Journal of Orofacial Myology and Myofunctional Therapy, 48(1), 1-2. https://doi.org/10.52010/ijom.2022.48.1.3