One Day Conferences
Families, Professionals, and Friends Working TogetherWhat you can expect at a one-day workshop:
Fun! You’ll also find support, information and meet other people dedicated to living successfully with stuttering.
The workshop format includes presentations, small discussion groups, panel presentations and group activities. Children, teens, siblings, parents and speech-language pathologists attend sessions geared specifically toward their individual needs.
Children’s programming is activity-based and focuses on feelings about and strategies for dealing with stuttering. This programming is facilitated by speech-language pathologists and members of the adult stuttering community.
Upcoming One-Day Conferences
More 2025 locations and dates to be announced soon. Stay tuned!
Raleigh, NC | Saturday, March 1, 2025
Partnership Magnet Elementary
601 Devereux St, Raleigh, NC 27605
Registration coming soon!
Chicago, IL | Saturday, April 12, 2025
DePaul Speech and Language Clinic
2400 N Sheffield Ave, Chicago IL 60614
Registration coming soon!
Financial assistance is available. If you are a family and you would like to attend a one-day conference, but you are experiencing financial difficulties and find the cost prohibitive, please reach out to Nic Brow at: nic@friendswhostutter.org
If you are interested in hosting a one-day conference in your area, or have questions about any existing one-day conferences, please contact Nic Brow at: nic@friendswhostutter.org
Philadelphia, PA
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia
02/15/2020
View Flyer | Register
Meet & Greet* in
Columbus, OH
at Tommy’s Pizza
02/23/2020
View Flyer | Facebook
*This is a social event.
ODC will be in Fall 2020.
Pittsburgh, PA
University of Pittsburgh: School of Health & Rehab Sciences
Postponed – New Date TBD
Kean University
Postponed – New Date TBA
For Families
The Friends one-day conference is a wonderful opportunity for families to come together and learn about stuttering while meeting other people who are dealing with similar struggles.
For Parents
- Learn how to best support your child
- Meet other parents of children who stutter
- Share experiences & concerns with people who “get it”
For Children
- Meet others who stutter
- Have fun talking!
- Learn about stuttering
- Increase your confidence communicating
LEARNING OUTCOMES
After attending this workshop, participants will be able to:
- Explain the relationship between effective intervention and self–esteem for children who stutter.
- Describe the need for a management approach to childhood stuttering that includes parents, professionals and support networks.
- Identify specific social and clinical strategies for supporting children and their families.
Read Financial and Non-Financial Disclosures
Shelby Potts M.S. CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF has no financial disclosures.
Barry Yeoman has no financial disclosures.
Caryn Herring MS, CCC-SLP is a salaried employee of Friends: The National Association of Young People Who Stutter.
Nicholas Brow, M.A., CCC-SLP is a salaried employee of George Washington University and an independent contractor at the Sisskin Stuttering Center and Friends: The National Association of Young People Who Stutter. He has no non-financial disclosures.
About the Presenters and Facilitators
Nic Brow M.A., CCC-SLP works as a speech language pathologist at the Sisskin Stuttering Center and as an Adjunct Faculty at George Washington University. He has worked as a speech therapist within multiple public schools with students from the preschool to high school level. Nic frequently presents on stuttering affirming therapy both nationally and internationally. He predominantly works with youth who stutter and their families, within the framework of Avoidance Reduction Therapy for Stuttering (ARTS®). In his free time, Nic enjoys surfing, pickleball, and spending time with family and friends.
Caryn Herring Ph.D., CCC-SLP is a person who stutters, a speech-language pathologist, and the executive director of Friends. Caryn first became involved with Friends in 2010, serving as the Friends Board of Directors Chairperson for 5 years. She graduated with her PhD from Michigan State University, her MS from Purdue University, and her BA from the University of Pittsburgh. Caryn’s research interests include the process of desensitization, reducing adverse impact, and enhancing accessibility for people who stutter. Caryn has presented at conferences and Universities across the country as well as taught and clinically supervised undergraduate and graduate students at Michigan State University, The University of Pittsburgh, Gannon University, and Duquesne University.
Shelby Potts M.S. CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF is a speech-language pathologist working in private practice in Raleigh, NC. She is a person who stutters. Her practice, Oak City Speech and Language Therapy, focuses on the holistic evaluation and treatment of children, teens, and adults who stutter, clutter, and/or have other fluency differences. She has presented at local, state, and national conventions and is involved in local support communities. She is a Board Certified Specialist in Stuttering, Cluttering and Fluency Disorders and serves as Social Media Director on the Executive Board of the American Board of Stuttering, Cluttering and Fluency Disorders. In addition to her clinical work, Shelby is passionate about reading, needlepointing, and fostering dogs for a local rescue organization.
Rita Thurman M.S. CCC-SLP, BCS-SCF received her MS degree Utah State University. She has worked in the schools and in clinical settings in Utah, Idaho, Illinois, Montana, Virgina and South/North Carolina. She has been in private practice in Raleigh, NC since 1985. Her practice focuses on the evaluation and treatment of children, teens and adults who stutter. She is a Board Certified Specialist in Stuttering, Cluttering and Fluency Disorders and served as Chair on the Executive Board of the American Board of Stuttering, Cluttering and Fluency Disorders. Ms. Thurman was awarded the NC Clinical Achievement Award in 2012, the NSA SLP of the year in 2015 and the NSA Chapter of the year in 2021–all for her work to improve services for children and adults who stutter. Ms. Thurman has presented workshops on fluency disorders for the NC Department of Public Instruction, the NC Speech-Hearing & Language Association, the ASHA Fluency Leadership Conference and the National Stuttering Association and has presented several workshops at ASHA. She has participated in the International Stuttering Awareness Day online conference and contributed a chapter in the book: Stuttering–Inspirational Stories, Professional Wisdom. She is a National Stuttering Association Adult and TWST (Teens Who STutter) Chapters leader, and sponsors an annual Friend’s Workshop in North Carolina.
Barry Yeoman is a person who stutters and a freelance journalist whose work has appeared in The Washington Post, The Guardian, National Wildlife, Sierra, Discover, The Nation, Audubon, and many other publications. He also teaches journalism at Duke University and Wake Forest University. He has been involved in the stuttering self-help movement for more than 30 year and co-founded Passing Twice, a network of LGBTQ+ people who stutter and their allies. He lives in Durham, North Carolina.
Testimonial for Friends One Day Conference
As a first time local host organizer, we found the process of setting up a one day conference to be very worthwhile. From the beginning, Lee Caggiano kept us informed of the requirements and provided good detail about the recommendations for everything from room necessities to activity ideas.
As a growing stuttering department, we felt this was an excellent way to open our doors to the stuttering community in central Indiana. Families of children who stutter, community SLP’s and local Universities were able to come together setting the foundation for future collaboration in helping those who stutter in Indiana!
Most impactful, however, was the privilege of having both Sara MacIntyre (conference coordinator) and Dr. Heather Grossman (guest speaker) lead our Indianapolis One Day Conference (February 2015). Sara was integral in organizing a successful day, from helping with ideas for our kid’s break-out sessions to gathering an inspiring panel of adult speakers who stutter. A person who stutters herself, Sara innately offered comfort to families that their own child can be a confident and successful communicator just like Sara-despite struggling with a stutter!
Dr. Grossman’s enlightening presentation set the stage for bountiful discussion from the parents and community SLP’s who attended. She clearly expressed the complexities associated with a stuttering diagnosis in a straight-forward manner which was appreciated by the audience. This allowed for honest discussion throughout the remainder of the conference, creating a rich and powerful day for each participant.
We were truly thrilled by the outcome of our ODC and look forward to organizing another ODC in the future!