Simucase Jack Intervention (SLP) Transcript | Complete
Assessment Transcript | Treatment, Skills Check &
100% Score | Stuttering Fluency Therapy | 2026
Updated
.
Section 1: Understanding the Case & Baseline
1. What is Jack's primary diagnosis?
A) Articulation disorder
B) Language disorder
C) Mild to moderate fluency disorder
D) Voice disorder
Correct Answer: C) Mild to moderate fluency disorder
Rationale: The supervising SLP confirms Jack's diagnosis as a mild to moderate fluency
disorder characterized by repetitions and blocks .
2. How does Jack describe his own stuttering?
A) As severe and debilitating
B) As repetitions and a couple of blocks
C) As a lisp that affects his social life
D) As a result of a brain injury
Correct Answer: B) As repetitions and a couple of blocks
Rationale: During the client interview, Jack states that his stuttering is mostly
"repetitions and a couple of blocks here and there" .
3. What is a primary concern for Jack regarding his future?
A) Whether he will be accepted into college
B) What will happen to him in the workplace
,C) If his stuttering will get worse as he ages
D) How his family will cope with his condition
Correct Answer: B) What will happen to him in the workplace
Rationale: Jack expresses a significant worry about being discriminated against and
what his future will hold in a professional environment .
4. Which of the following is NOT reported as a situation that makes Jack's
stuttering worse?
A) Talking in groups
B) Giving presentations
C) Talking one-on-one with his mother
D) Talking to girls
Correct Answer: C) Talking one-on-one with his mother
Rationale: Jack reports that his stuttering gets worse "in groups; presentations; talking
to girls; anything out of the house," implying that talking at home with family is a more
comfortable context .
5. Which family members have a history of stuttering?
A) His mother and sister
B) His father and grandfather
C) His uncle and cousin
D) Only Jack
Correct Answer: B) His father and grandfather
Rationale: Jack's mother reports a family history of stuttering, specifying that his father
(a physician) and his grandfather both stutter .
6. At what age did Jack's speech problem begin?
A) At birth
B) Around two or three years old
C) In middle school
D) After a traumatic event
Correct Answer: B) Around two or three years old
, Rationale: His mother indicates that Jack began stuttering around the age of two or
three .
7. In addition to his fluency disorder, what other medical condition does Jack
have?
A) A seizure disorder
B) A hearing impairment
C) A cardiac condition
D) A visual impairment
Correct Answer: A) A seizure disorder
Rationale: The supervising SLP mentions that Jack "also has a seizure disorder" .
8. Jack has difficulty monitoring rate and vocal intensity, especially in what type of
situations?
A) In quiet, one-on-one settings
B) When he is tired
C) In social situations
D) When he is reading silently
Correct Answer: C) In social situations
Rationale: The supervising SLP notes that Jack has difficulty monitoring rate and vocal
intensity "especially in social situations" .
9. What is Jack's attitude towards his therapy sessions?
A) He is resistant and unmotivated.
B) He is internally motivated and works hard.
C) He is only motivated when his mother is present.
D) He is indifferent to the therapy process.
Correct Answer: B) He is internally motivated and works hard.
Rationale: The supervising SLP describes Jack as "internally motivated" and diligent in
completing every task given to him .
Assessment Transcript | Treatment, Skills Check &
100% Score | Stuttering Fluency Therapy | 2026
Updated
.
Section 1: Understanding the Case & Baseline
1. What is Jack's primary diagnosis?
A) Articulation disorder
B) Language disorder
C) Mild to moderate fluency disorder
D) Voice disorder
Correct Answer: C) Mild to moderate fluency disorder
Rationale: The supervising SLP confirms Jack's diagnosis as a mild to moderate fluency
disorder characterized by repetitions and blocks .
2. How does Jack describe his own stuttering?
A) As severe and debilitating
B) As repetitions and a couple of blocks
C) As a lisp that affects his social life
D) As a result of a brain injury
Correct Answer: B) As repetitions and a couple of blocks
Rationale: During the client interview, Jack states that his stuttering is mostly
"repetitions and a couple of blocks here and there" .
3. What is a primary concern for Jack regarding his future?
A) Whether he will be accepted into college
B) What will happen to him in the workplace
,C) If his stuttering will get worse as he ages
D) How his family will cope with his condition
Correct Answer: B) What will happen to him in the workplace
Rationale: Jack expresses a significant worry about being discriminated against and
what his future will hold in a professional environment .
4. Which of the following is NOT reported as a situation that makes Jack's
stuttering worse?
A) Talking in groups
B) Giving presentations
C) Talking one-on-one with his mother
D) Talking to girls
Correct Answer: C) Talking one-on-one with his mother
Rationale: Jack reports that his stuttering gets worse "in groups; presentations; talking
to girls; anything out of the house," implying that talking at home with family is a more
comfortable context .
5. Which family members have a history of stuttering?
A) His mother and sister
B) His father and grandfather
C) His uncle and cousin
D) Only Jack
Correct Answer: B) His father and grandfather
Rationale: Jack's mother reports a family history of stuttering, specifying that his father
(a physician) and his grandfather both stutter .
6. At what age did Jack's speech problem begin?
A) At birth
B) Around two or three years old
C) In middle school
D) After a traumatic event
Correct Answer: B) Around two or three years old
, Rationale: His mother indicates that Jack began stuttering around the age of two or
three .
7. In addition to his fluency disorder, what other medical condition does Jack
have?
A) A seizure disorder
B) A hearing impairment
C) A cardiac condition
D) A visual impairment
Correct Answer: A) A seizure disorder
Rationale: The supervising SLP mentions that Jack "also has a seizure disorder" .
8. Jack has difficulty monitoring rate and vocal intensity, especially in what type of
situations?
A) In quiet, one-on-one settings
B) When he is tired
C) In social situations
D) When he is reading silently
Correct Answer: C) In social situations
Rationale: The supervising SLP notes that Jack has difficulty monitoring rate and vocal
intensity "especially in social situations" .
9. What is Jack's attitude towards his therapy sessions?
A) He is resistant and unmotivated.
B) He is internally motivated and works hard.
C) He is only motivated when his mother is present.
D) He is indifferent to the therapy process.
Correct Answer: B) He is internally motivated and works hard.
Rationale: The supervising SLP describes Jack as "internally motivated" and diligent in
completing every task given to him .