You Can Rebuild Your Life After Stroke
Prior to his stroke, Dr. Broussard was the associate dean for Admissions & Career Services at the Heller School for Social Policy & Management at Brandeis University for five years. Previously, he had owned and operated Career Prospects, Inc., a staffing and career counseling company for fifteen years. He graduated from the US Naval Academy and earned his Ph.D. from the Heller School at Brandeis University. The focus of his doctoral studies was workforce development and the employment of people with disabilities.
He had his stroke in 2011 and could not read, write, or speak well but kept a diary. He couldn’t write, but “recorded” his diary by using drawings, graphs, charts, and metaphorical pictures. The recovery from damage of his language progressed from individual words to fragments to sentences to paragraphs to pages. He also recorded his voice which, with his diary, provided the evidence needed to assess and rebuild the different modalities of his deficits. He started with what the nurses called “word salad,” and grew to a point when his lost grammar had come back.
Purchase Tom's Books on Amazon.
Stroke Diary, A Primer for Aphasia Therapy
https://amzn.to/3QhI7Nm
Stroke Diary, The Secret of Aphasia Recovery, (Volume 2) https://amzn.to/3tFjKAk
Stroke Diary, Just So Stories, How Aphasia Got Its Language Back (Volume 3)
https://amzn.to/46PW0rU
The ABCs of Aphasia: A Stroke Primer
https://amzn.to/45L1LpT
Stroke and Aphasia Recovery: Metaphors Help Us Mend https://amzn.to/46uRX4h
Prior to his stroke, Dr. Broussard was the associate dean for Admissions & Career Services at the Heller School for Social Policy & Management at Brandeis University for five years. Previously, he had owned and operated Career Prospects, Inc., a staffing and career counseling company for fifteen years. He graduated from the US Naval Academy and earned his Ph.D. from the Heller School at Brandeis University. The focus of his doctoral studies was workforce development and the employment of people with disabilities.
He had his stroke in 2011 and could not read, write, or speak well but kept a diary. He couldn’t write, but “recorded” his diary by using drawings, graphs, charts, and metaphorical pictures. The recovery from damage of his language progressed from individual words to fragments to sentences to paragraphs to pages. He also recorded his voice which, with his diary, provided the evidence needed to assess and rebuild the different modalities of his deficits. He started with what the nurses called “word salad,” and grew to a point when his lost grammar had come back.
Purchase Tom’s Books on Amazon.
Stroke Diary, A Primer for Aphasia Therapy
https://amzn.to/3QhI7Nm
Stroke Diary, The Secret of Aphasia Recovery, (Volume 2) https://amzn.to/3tFjKAk
Stroke Diary, Just So Stories, How Aphasia Got Its Language Back (Volume 3)
https://amzn.to/46PW0rU
The ABCs of Aphasia: A Stroke Primer
https://amzn.to/45L1LpT
Stroke and Aphasia Recovery: Metaphors Help Us Mend https://amzn.to/46uRX4h
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