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About Us
Our Mission
The research, teaching, and service programs of the Department of Speech and Hearing Science are committed to further
understanding of the entire spectrum of communication. The undergraduate curriculum offers a broad background in the
theoretical, basic, and applied aspects of biological, behavioral, linguistic, and social foundations of human communication,
to educate students who intend to pursue careers and/or graduate studies in many fields related to communication, health,
and medicine. The graduate program focuses on research and clinical education in communication, its disabilities, and the
treatment and prevention of communicative disabilities. To these ends, the department:
- educates the students of the state, nation, and world regarding the nature of communication and communication differences and disabilities;
- investigates health, development and aging, and disability related to speech, language, deglutition, and hearing across the life span;
- develops methods to prevent, identify, assess, and treat disabilities of human communication;
- prepares students to investigate communication and its disabilities as scientists and educators, and
- prepares students to prevent and treat communicative disabilities as speech-language pathologists and audiologists.
Our History
Established in 1973 within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the Department of Speech and Hearing Science
went through several name changes before finally becoming part of the College of Applied Health Sciences in 1991.
The University of Illinois Speech Clinic began as an outreach program in a janitor's mop closet in Lincoln
Hall in 1938. Dr. Severina Nelson could find no other space to conduct her speech therapy. Two years later, with
the title of director of the speech clinic and a $2,000 grant, Dr. Nelson moved the clinic to a spacious new office
in Gregory Hall. The Speech and Hearing Clinic was later housed in the Lorado Taft House where it remained until it
moved to its present building in 1975. In 2007, the Speech-Language Pathology Clinic moved to a new, expanded,
state-of-the-art facility located in Research Park. The Audiology Clinic and the Department of Speech and Hearing
Science remain in the Speech and Hearing Science building.
Our Programs
Recognizing the need for trained clinicians, Dr. Nelson organized a training program for speech therapists by
establishing a four-year curriculum and a fifth year of graduate study. The Department now offers several graduate
study programs. In 2004, the Department began offering doctoral-level clinical professional training.
Our Research and Faculty
Research in the department is supported by grants from leading funding agencies including:
Funding Agencies
- National Institutes of Health
- National Science Foundation
- Department of Education
- Department of Defense.
Through their own research and through involvement in the field serving as members of journal editorial boards,
on national review panels, and on professional committees, our professors bring leading-edge knowledge and expertise
to their classrooms and laboratories. Undergraduate and graduate students have the opportunity to become involved
with the brightest scholars pursuing complex research problems.