Description
Eliciting P - Pop-Pop Balloons. Eliciting Speech Sounds Free PDF download!
✅ A4 free pdf download
This appealing, high-quality image makes eliciting speech sounds more fun for even the youngest learners. This pdf helps speech therapists and teachers elicit the targeted P speech sound 10 times within one page!
These colourful balloons can be used to elicit the P speech sound. Simply point to each balloon and say 'P'. It may also be used to help learn the P speech sound and practice the P speech sound in isolation or word level as in 'pop'.
This free pdf is referenced in our book, Ultimate Speech Sounds: Eliciting Sounds Using 3D Animation, and the complete set of free eliciting speech sounds pdfs are available here for all the consonants used in English.
Supported by free YouTube tutorials as part of the DARA series (Digitised Automated Realistic Articulator).
- This is a digital download and no physical items will be sent to you. Upon purchase, you will receive a printable pdf for eliciting the P speech sound.
- Colours may vary slightly depending on your printer.
➕ Words with P at the beginning
➕ Words with P in the middle
➕ Words with P at the end
⭐ What is included?
Once we have confirmed your order, you will have instant access to download your file.
⭐ Can I use it for commercial purposes?
No. Commercial use, including resale, is forbidden. This item is sold for personal use only and is © 2023, Resourceible. All rights reserved.
Please note:
📌 This resource is a digital pdf download and no physical item will be sent.
📌 Colors and sizes may vary depending on your printer.
Specialist SLP
Kate Beckett
Kate is the founder of Resourceible and creator of DARA® (Digitised Automated Realistic Articulator). She is a Specialist SLP who studied Speech and Language Therapy and Nursing at the University of Limerick, Ireland. Kate is an experienced practitioner and fully registered in Ireland, the UK, and America with their respective Speech Therapy Associations, IASLT, RCSLT, and ASHA. She also holds full registration with the Health and Social Care Professional Regulator (CORU). She has clinical experience working in New Zealand, England, and Ireland across both community and acute hospital settings, in the public and private sectors and with adult and pediatric students.