What are the responsibilities and job description for the Professor in Speech Language Pathology position at Appalachian State University?
Clinical Instructor / Asst. Professor / Assoc. Professor in Speech-Language Pathology
The Department of Rehabilitation Sciences is seeking a clinical faculty member to provide clinical education to SLP graduate students and develop expanded clinical programming involving pediatric clients to include preschoolers, autism, and other complex communication disorders. Responsibilities will include permanently or temporarily serving as the Director of the Thomas O. Eller Preschool Language Classroom (PLC). The PLC is an inclusive preschool classroom that operates four mornings per week, with children receiving interdisciplinary services including speech-language pathology, occupational therapy, music therapy and social work support. The faculty member may also be responsible for participating on multidisciplinary evaluation teams. Experience in clinical administration and expertise in augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) is desired. Opportunities also exist for research collaboration and limited academic teaching.
Minimum qualifications : Masters degree in Speech-Language Pathology; minimum 5 years clinical experience in evaluation and treatment of preschool-age children including autistic preschoolers and children with other complex communication needs; minimum two years experience in clinical supervision of graduate students; ASHA certification (CCC-SLP) and eligibility for NC licensure.
Essential duties and responsibilities : Provide clinical services to preschool-aged clients within and outside a preschool classroom setting; provide clinical teaching and supervision of graduate students; serve as Director of the Thomas O. Eller Preschool Language Classroom (PLC) including oversight of a bachelor’s level preschool teacher who supports the operation of the PLC; develop and implement additional programming for pediatric clients with autism and other complex communication needs; work closely with providers in other disciplines (occupational therapy, social work, nutrition, music therapy) to provide interdisciplinary clinical services to families and interprofessional training opportunities to students.
Review of applications begins 3 / 3 / 25.
The Department of Rehabilitation Sciences includes fully accredited graduate programs in Athletic Training and Speech-Language Pathology, a new graduate program in Occupational Therapy (full accreditation expected in 2026), an undergraduate program in Communication Sciences and Disorders, and minors in American Sign Language and Communication Sciences and Disorders. Our students are trained to empower people of all ages to improve / restore their functional abilities, fulfill their daily routines and roles, mitigate limitations or disabilities following injury or illness, and live full lives in the context of differing abilities. In addition, the department is home to the Charles and Geneva S. Scott Scottish Rite Communication Disorders Clinic, which provides speech, language, hearing, and pediatric occupational therapy services as an outreach to the community and as a primary site for student clinical training.
Appalachian State University’s Beaver College of Health Sciences (BCHS) is transforming the health and quality of lives of individuals, families, and communities through inclusive practices, interprofessional collaboration, and innovation in teaching, scholarship, service, and clinical outreach. The BCHS supports over 3,400 students in nine undergraduate and nine graduate degree programs, organized into six academic departments. The programs are located in Boone in the Holmes Convocation Center and the Leon Levine Hall of Health Sciences, the cornerstone of Boone’s Wellness District. We also have a presence on our new campus in Hickory. The college supports the Appalachian Institute for Health and Wellness and has a collaborative partnership with the Wake Forest School of Medicine’s Physician Assistant Program and multiple health and human service agencies across the region.
Appalachian State University, in North Carolina’s Blue Ridge Mountains, prepares students to lead purposeful lives as global citizens who understand and engage their responsibilities in creating a sustainable future for all. The transformational Appalachian experience promotes a spirit of inclusion that brings people together in inspiring ways to acquire and create knowledge, to grow holistically, to act with passion and determination, and embrace diversity and difference. As one of 17 campuses in the University of North Carolina system, Appalachian enrolls more than 20,000 students, has a low student-to-faculty ratio and offers more than 150 undergraduate and graduate majors.