How to Switch from ALF to School-Based SLP Successfully

A step-by-step roadmap for speech-language pathologists moving from assisted living facilities to school settings — even without pediatric experience.

By Benjamin Thompson, M.S., CCC‑SLPReviewed by SLP Editoral TeamUpdated July 9, 202625+ min read
ALF to School SLP Transition: Career Change Guide (2026)

Points of interest…

  • Most states require a separate school services credential beyond CCC-SLP and state licensure.
  • SLP job growth is roughly five times faster than the national average for all occupations.
  • Peak school district SLP hiring runs from March through May each year.

Roughly 55 percent of ASHA-certified SLPs work in medical or long-term care settings, so switching to schools is far from unusual. Clinicians who have spent years in assisted living facilities often feel pigeon-holed, yet they bring a clinical sophistication that many school teams lack: deep knowledge of dysphagia, cognitive-communication disorders, and medically complex cases.

For most ALF-to-school candidates, the greatest uncertainty is whether you can break in without pediatric experience. The answer is yes, but the path runs through state-specific school services credentials, not just CCC-SLP and a license. Those requirements, not a lack of child-focused clinical hours, are the real pivot point. This guide walks through speech pathology work environments side by side, then covers credentialing, salary trade-offs, and how to position your ALF background for a school interview.

ALF Vs. School-Based SLP: Key Differences at a Glance

On paper, both roles carry the same credential: a master's degree in speech-language pathology, ASHA's Certificate of Clinical Competence (CCC-SLP), and state licensure.1 In practice, the day-to-day work, the paperwork, the pay, and even the calendar look almost nothing alike. Here is how the two settings compare side by side.

Who You Serve and Why

In an assisted living facility, your caseload is adult and geriatric, and services are driven by medical necessity. You are treating dysphagia, aphasia, cognitive-communication deficits after stroke or dementia progression, and voice or motor speech disorders tied to neurogenic conditions.2 School-based work flips the frame entirely. Eligibility is determined by educational impact under IDEA, documented through an IEP, and the clinical focus shifts to language, literacy, articulation, social communication, and augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) for students from early intervention through age 21.2

Caseload, Calendar, and Documentation

ALF clinicians typically work a 12-month schedule with productivity targets measured in billable minutes and daily Medicare/insurance notes. School SLPs work a 9 to 10 month contract, but the median caseload is around 48 students, with averages closer to 55,3 and 28 states have no legal caseload cap at all.4 Documentation shifts from SOAP notes and functional maintenance programs to IEPs, present levels, goal banks, Medicaid billing (in some districts), and MTSS or response-to-intervention paperwork. For a fuller breakdown of how these SLP career settings differ beyond compensation, the contrasts in daily structure alone can be decisive.

Compensation Trade-Offs

This is where many ALF clinicians hesitate. The national median wage for SLPs is roughly $95,410,5 but medical settings pay well above that: about $106,500 in nursing and residential care, $100,990 in general hospitals, and $121,220 in home health.2 School-based SLPs earn a median closer to $74,000, with a mean around $80,280.2 Geography matters enormously here: a school SLP in California earns a median near $110,000, while the same role in Louisiana sits closer to $58,000.2 Factor in summers off, pension eligibility, and student loan forgiveness through PSLF, and the gap narrows more than the raw wage suggests.

Transferable Skills: What ALF Experience Brings to Schools

What skills from my ALF job actually transfer to a school setting? It is a common question, and the answer might surprise you. The daily work you do in assisted living builds a toolkit that is directly applicable to school-based speech-language pathology, even if the populations look different on the surface.

Cognitive-Communication Therapy: A Foundation for School-Based Intervention

Your work on memory, problem-solving, and executive function with older adults maps neatly onto the needs of many students. Children with traumatic brain injury, autism speech therapy needs, or intellectual disability often struggle with the same underlying cognitive-communication processes. The strategies you use to support attention, sequencing, and self-monitoring are transferable; you just adjust the context and age-appropriate materials. For example, a visual schedule you crafted for a resident with dementia can become a classroom task planner for a middle school student with executive function deficits.

Documentation Discipline: From MDS to IEP Compliance

ALF clinicians live in a world of MDS assessments, productivity tracking, and Medicare documentation. That rigor is an asset, not a gap, when you move to schools. IEPs require detailed present levels, measurable goals, and progress monitoring that follow strict timelines. Your habit of precise, data-driven documentation means you already think in terms of functional outcomes and accountability. Many school-based SLPs struggle with this; you will arrive with a built-in advantage. Frame this in interviews as a strength: you know how to document what matters and meet deadlines without sacrificing therapy quality.

Interdisciplinary Teamwork: Same Skills, Different Team

In ALF, you collaborate daily with occupational therapy, physical therapy, nursing, and social work. School settings mirror this structure with teachers, school psychologists, special education coordinators, and paraprofessionals. The core skill is identical: communicating clinical findings to non-SLP team members and negotiating shared goals for the client. Your experience in care plan meetings translates directly to IEP meetings, where you will advocate for students and help the team see the communication piece of the puzzle. Knowing how to prep for those conversations is just as important, so reviewing common school SLP interview questions before you apply can help you articulate these strengths clearly.

Dysphagia Expertise: A High-Demand Niche in Schools

One skill set that truly sets you apart is feeding and swallowing knowledge. Many SLPs in schools have limited dysphagia training, yet districts increasingly serve medically complex students who need this support. Your experience with modified diets, aspiration precautions, and oral-motor assessments is a differentiator. Position it as a specialized competency that most school SLP applicants lack; it can make you the go-to resource for a district's most vulnerable learners.

Do You Need Pediatric Experience to Work in Schools?

The honest tension here is between what is legally required and what hiring managers quietly prefer. Those two things are not always the same, and knowing the difference can save you from talking yourself out of applications you are fully qualified to submit.

What the Rules Actually Say

Most states do not require pediatric or school-based experience as a condition of obtaining a school SLP credential. In the majority of cases, holding the CCC-SLP certification plus whatever state-level school credential your state requires is enough to be licensed for the role. ASHA's SLP scope of practice does not restrict where you can work based on your prior setting. That means you have both the ethical standing and the professional standing to apply for school positions after working exclusively in assisted living facilities.

Where Flexibility Varies

In practice, how much your ALF background matters depends heavily on where you are applying.

  • Rural districts and shortage states: These employers frequently hire SLPs with no school experience because the alternative is leaving positions unfilled. Many will provide mentorship or onboarding support.
  • Contract staffing agencies: Agencies that place SLPs in schools are often the most flexible, since they are motivated to get clinicians placed and can pair newer school SLPs with experienced supervisors.
  • Competitive suburban districts: Urban-adjacent districts with deep applicant pools may screen for candidates who already have school or pediatric experience, simply because they can afford to be selective.

Understanding the local market before you apply shapes how you position yourself.

Bridge Roles That Build School-Relevant Experience

If you want to close the experience gap before applying, a 6-to-12 month bridge role can make a meaningful difference on paper and in practice. The most useful options include:

  • Early intervention (Part C programs): Working with children from birth to age three is directly relevant to school-based practice and valued by hiring committees.
  • Pediatric outpatient clinics: Treating children for articulation, language, or fluency disorders gives you exposure to evaluation tools and therapy approaches common in schools.
  • University clinic placements or supervision roles: Some programs welcome licensed SLPs as clinical supervisors, which adds pediatric hours and a collegial credential to your resume.

None of these steps are mandatory. They are options worth weighing if you find that competitive markets are pushing back on your application, or if you simply want more confidence before your first day in a school setting.

Licensure, Certification, and School Credentialing Requirements

To work as a school-based SLP, you typically need authorization at three separate levels: a national clinical certification (CCC-SLP), a state clinical license, and a state-issued school services credential. The first two cover your ability to practice speech-language pathology broadly; the third is specific to employment in a public school setting and is issued by each state's Department of Education (DOE) or equivalent commission. In many states, all three are required simultaneously, though some offer streamlined pathways for experienced clinicians. For a full walkthrough of the school-based pathway, school speech language pathologist education requirements are covered in detail on our career guide.

State-by-State Variations

The school credentialing process varies widely. For example, California requires a Two-Year Preliminary Speech-Language Pathology Services Credential through the California Commission on Teacher Credentialing (CTC).1 Applicants must hold a master's degree, submit transcripts, pass a background check, and either hold the CCC-SLP or pass the Praxis exam.2 This preliminary credential is valid for 24 months and serves as a built-in provisional route for those transitioning into schools.1 Note that California also requires a separate state clinical license through the Department of Consumer Affairs, in addition to the school credential.3 Texas mandates certification through the State Board for Educator Certification (SBEC), while New York accepts the CCC-SLP alongside a Teacher of Students with Speech and Language Disabilities (TSSLD) certificate. Florida, Illinois, and Ohio each have their own distinct school services endorsements or certificates, often with reciprocal recognition of the CCC-SLP. Always check your target state's DOE website for current requirements, as these rules can shift from year to year.

The Typical Application Process

Applying for a school credential generally involves several common steps. First, you'll request an official transcript review from your graduate program. Next, most states require fingerprinting and a criminal background check. You'll then submit an online application and pay a fee, which can range from $50 to $200 depending on the state. Processing times typically run 4 to 12 weeks, so plan accordingly. Some states may also ask for verification of your clinical license or CCC-SLP status.

Leveraging Provisional Credentials

If you're concerned about a gap in pediatric coursework, provisional or emergency credentials can be a practical bridge. Many states offer these for shortage areas, allowing an SLP with adult experience to begin working in schools while completing any missing academic requirements. California's Two-Year Preliminary Credential is one example; other states have similar temporary authorizations.1 This pathway lets you earn a school salary and gain experience while you finish a few graduate-level courses or a supervised school practicum, rather than delaying your transition by a full year or more.

State-By-State School SLP Credentialing Snapshot

State education department credentials versus CCC-SLP alone: understanding which your target state requires determines your entire application strategy. While ASHA certification demonstrates clinical competency nationwide, most states mandate an additional school-specific credential before you can work in public K-12 settings.

How State Requirements Vary

Each state's department of education sets its own credentialing rules for school-based SLPs. Some states accept CCC-SLP as the primary qualification and issue a corresponding educational license with minimal paperwork. Others require a completely separate application process, additional coursework, or fingerprinting and background checks specific to educational employment. A good starting point is reviewing SLP license requirements by state to understand the general landscape before diving into your target state's education agency.

California: A Separate Credential System

California requires the Speech-Language Pathology Services Credential issued by the Commission on Teacher Credentialing. Holding CCC-SLP alone is not sufficient to work in California public schools. The state does offer provisional routes for career changers, allowing you to begin working while completing any outstanding requirements. This provisional pathway can be particularly helpful for ALF clinicians making the transition, as it provides flexibility during the credentialing process.

Planning Your Credentialing Timeline

Before applying to school districts in any state, research the specific requirements through that state's department of education website. Key questions to answer include:

  • Does the state require a separate school SLP credential beyond CCC-SLP?
  • Are provisional, emergency, or temporary permits available for career changers?
  • What documentation must accompany your application (transcripts, verification of clinical hours, background clearances)?
  • How long does processing typically take?

Many states process school credentials within four to eight weeks, but some require longer timelines. Starting your credentialing application early, ideally before you begin interviewing, demonstrates initiative and allows you to accept offers without delays. Contact your state's education agency directly when published information seems unclear, as requirements can change between legislative sessions.

School SLP Salary Comparison by State

The table below shows median annual wages for Speech-Language Pathologists across all 50 states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, based on the most recent Occupational Employment and Wage Statistics from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics (2024 data). Keep in mind that BLS does not break out school-based SLPs separately, so these figures reflect the profession as a whole. School SLP compensation often includes benefits that many ALF positions do not, such as participation in a public employee pension system, summers off (or extended breaks), and eligibility for Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF), all of which can add significant value beyond the base salary shown here.

StateMedian Annual Wage25th Percentile75th PercentileTotal Employment
California$116,000$95,830$132,39014,680
New York$108,870$81,120$131,99016,250
Hawaii$108,230$99,900$112,970130
Colorado$108,070$92,000$133,4804,260
District of Columbia$106,950$97,190$130,660410
New Mexico$104,910$84,130$127,1801,040
Oregon$104,230$89,750$128,9001,750
Washington$102,450$86,990$118,6503,170
Massachusetts$101,790$81,390$114,0505,000
New Jersey$101,600$77,750$132,6907,660
Delaware$101,030$86,260$108,020N/A
Nevada$100,840$83,810$114,4001,170
Rhode Island$100,680$83,740$110,750810
Maryland$100,560$79,070$114,7703,720
Georgia$99,100$75,630$104,6304,190
Arizona$95,990$78,680$110,3302,830
Florida$97,150$79,940$103,9508,990
Virginia$94,370$76,820$108,7503,850
Pennsylvania$93,800$76,870$105,8806,860
South Carolina$91,880$71,510$105,3902,150
Texas$89,450$73,600$113,39018,600
Ohio$88,340$74,300$103,5007,660
North Carolina$87,420$69,640$102,9605,160
Wyoming$85,820$67,560$107,130270
Utah$85,320$62,960$102,5101,450
Indiana$84,330$71,650$104,2303,080
Oklahoma$84,310$62,300$106,4402,040
Missouri$83,950$65,570$100,5502,700
New Hampshire$83,800$70,350$102,710790
Tennessee$82,990$65,070$100,0503,510
Kentucky$82,910$67,140$102,1902,520
Illinois$82,480$69,220$105,4809,100
Minnesota$82,450$68,220$97,8403,730
Michigan$81,860$66,550$98,7404,410
Nebraska$81,710$67,110$98,3901,230
Maine$81,700$71,440$91,660610
Kansas$81,360$66,190$100,5801,790
Iowa$81,120$73,700$98,4701,390
Wisconsin$80,580$69,620$99,9803,210
Montana$80,330$67,350$99,910430
West Virginia$80,170$63,020$104,420920
Arkansas$79,800$61,420$110,9302,740
Vermont$78,580$69,800$96,230470
Idaho$78,450$43,260$98,3201,310
Mississippi$75,790$60,850$97,6101,510
Alabama$72,560$60,430$93,6001,840
North Dakota$67,330$60,160$83,350670
Louisiana$65,770$59,470$83,7803,110
South Dakota$63,180$61,690$77,510510
Puerto Rico$49,850$37,700$87,240200

SLP Job Outlook: Is the Field Oversaturated?

Far from oversaturated, the speech-language pathology field is projected to grow roughly five times faster than the average for all occupations. School settings face especially acute shortages, making this an opportune time for ALF clinicians considering a transition.

SLP job outlook stats including 15% projected growth from 2024 to 2034, $95,410 median salary, and 78.5% of school SLP openings exceeding applicants

School District Hiring Timelines and Application Strategy

School district hiring operates on a predictable annual rhythm, and understanding that cycle gives career changers a strategic advantage over applicants who submit resumes at random.

The Primary Hiring Window

Most districts post SLP positions between March and May for contracts beginning in late August or early September.1 This early posting window allows administrators to finalize budgets, confirm enrollment projections, and build their related services teams before summer break. If you are targeting direct-hire district positions, plan to have your application materials polished and ready by February so you can apply as soon as postings appear.

A secondary hiring wave occurs from June through August as districts scramble to fill last-minute vacancies created by resignations, retirements, or unexpected enrollment shifts. Leave-replacement positions, covering maternity leaves or medical absences, often post in June and July with start dates ranging from the first day of school through mid-year.2 Summer school SLP roles typically begin in June or July for those seeking shorter-term entry points.

Direct-Hire vs. Staffing Agency Placements

Direct-hire district positions involve a lengthier process, often taking several weeks to a couple of months from application to offer.3 Contract positions through school-based SLP staffing agency placements move much faster, sometimes placing SLPs within a few weeks.4 Interview-to-offer timelines with agencies can span just days to a week, with onboarding typically completed in two to four weeks.4 For career changers without pediatric experience on their resume, agencies often serve as easier entry points because they are accustomed to matching clinicians with districts willing to train.

Where to Find Postings

District HR portals remain the most reliable source for SLP openings, as many positions never appear on general job boards. Check postings under "related services" or "special education" rather than searching only for "speech-language pathologist," since classification varies by district. State ASHA convention job fairs offer direct access to hiring managers and can accelerate your candidacy. Major urban systems like New York City typically post positions during summer months into the start of the school year, with the broader teacher hiring window running April through August.1

How to Tailor Your Resume and Ace the School SLP Interview

Roughly 55% of ASHA-certified SLPs work in medical or long-term care settings, which means school hiring managers read a lot of resumes from clinicians making exactly your move. The ones that get callbacks translate ALF work into school language without erasing what makes it valuable.

Rewrite Your Bullet Points in School Language

Same work, different vocabulary. Recast your ALF experience so a school director sees the transferable skill immediately:

  • "Collaborated with interdisciplinary team" becomes "Contributed to IEP-style team meetings with nursing, OT, PT, and family members to align care goals."
  • "Treated cognitive-communication deficits" becomes "Designed executive function, memory, and language interventions that support functional daily performance, skills directly applicable to academic access."
  • "Maintained productivity standards of 90%" becomes "Managed a caseload of 45+ residents with daily documentation, scheduling, and progress monitoring."
  • "Completed Medicare Part B evaluations and POCs" becomes "Authored evaluation reports, measurable goals, and progress notes under strict compliance timelines."

Prepare for the Questions You'll Actually Get

School interviews lean on scenario questions, and your ALF experience answers most of them if you frame it right. Reviewing common SLP job interview questions and answers before your interview can sharpen how you translate that experience into school-specific language:

  • "How do you handle a caseload of 60+?" Talk about ALF productivity standards, batching documentation, and prioritizing by acuity. You already do this.
  • "How do you collaborate with families and teams?" Reference care conferences, family training after a stroke, and coordinating with nursing on communication strategies.
  • "What's your experience with data collection?" Point to daily treatment notes, functional outcome measures, and Medicare-required progress tracking.
  • "Why schools, why now?" This is the one to rehearse. Answer it as growth, not escape.

Write a Cover Letter That Names the Switch

Don't leave the setting change unaddressed. One short paragraph acknowledging it disarms the concern before the interview:

"After four years in assisted living, I'm seeking to apply my caseload management, documentation, and interdisciplinary collaboration skills to pediatric practice, where I can support communication development across a full school year rather than episodic care."

Don't bury your ALF years or apologize for them. Lead with what they gave you: medical complexity, dysphagia expertise, documentation discipline, and the ability to hold a caseload without drowning. Those are things a new grad cannot offer, and a smart hiring manager knows it.

Professional Development to Close the Pediatric Knowledge Gap

Transitioning from assisted living to school settings means building fluency in areas you may not have touched since graduate school. The good news: dozens of ASHA-approved continuing education providers offer targeted courses that can get you up to speed efficiently, and many options fit a tight budget.

Structured CEU Courses for Pediatric Competency

Several platforms specialize in school-relevant topics like articulation disorders, childhood language development, fluency, and augmentative and alternative communication (AAC):

  • SpeechPathology.com: Offers over 700 ASHA-approved courses for $129 per year, covering everything from phonological disorders to literacy-based intervention.1
  • ASHA Learning Pass: Provides bundled continuing education for $144 per year, including 1.05 ASHA CEUs and curated content on pediatric assessment and treatment.2
  • Northern Speech Services: Features more than 200 courses, including specialized programs like Babble Boot Camp for early speech-sound development.3
  • Education Resources Inc.: Delivers comprehensive packages worth up to 1.4 ASHA CEUs, with practical workshops on classroom-based service delivery.4

If AAC is a priority, look into courses from PRC-Saltillo or the Assistive Technology Industry Association (ATIA), both ASHA-approved providers with deep focus on device selection and implementation.5

Join ASHA Special Interest Groups

Two ASHA SIGs offer direct access to school-focused research, discussion forums, and professional networking:

  • SIG 16 (School-Based Issues): Covers IEP development, workload management, collaboration with educators, and policy updates affecting school SLPs.2
  • SIG 1 (Language Learning and Education): Focuses on literacy, language disorders in academic contexts, and evidence-based speech therapy techniques for classroom interventions.2

Membership includes access to webinars, peer communities, and practice resources that accelerate your learning curve.

Shadow a School SLP

Nothing replaces direct observation. Many districts allow prospective employees or career-changers to shadow a school SLP for one to two days. During your visit, you can observe IEP meetings, see how push-in and pull-out service models work in practice, and get a feel for classroom dynamics. Reach out to your local district's special education coordinator to request an observation day.

Free and Low-Cost Options

Budget constraints should not block your professional growth:

  • State association webinars: Most state speech-language-hearing associations offer free or low-cost CEU events for members.
  • The Informed SLP: Provides access to over 200 hours of continuing education content for $12 per month, with research summaries that translate directly into practice.6
  • District onboarding PD: Many school districts include orientation training for new hires, covering topics like Medicaid billing, data collection systems, and collaboration protocols.
  • SLP social media communities: For peer support and therapy ideas during your transition, SLP blogs and online communities are also a practical starting point.

By combining formal coursework with hands-on observation and peer networking, you can close the pediatric knowledge gap before your first day in a school building.

Your First 90 Days as a School-Based SLP: What to Expect

What does the first semester actually look like when you move from an assisted living facility to a school-based SLP role? The work itself may feel familiar, but the systems and pace will be new. Your first 90 days are less about being a productivity machine and more about learning the rhythms of a school environment, building relationships, and understanding the documentation that keeps an IEP-driven practice running.

Understanding Your New Environment: The IEP Engine

In schools, the Individualized Education Program (IEP) is the central document that drives service delivery. Unlike the medical model where you treat based on physician orders and standardized assessments, school services are determined by educational impact and team consensus. You will quickly need to learn the IEP meeting types: initial evaluations to determine eligibility, annual reviews to update goals and services, and triennial re-evaluations. Each has legal timelines that vary by state. Within your first week, search for "school-based SLP IEP timeline" on your state department of education website to find the specific deadlines you must meet. Print that timeline and keep it visible. Missing a deadline can carry compliance consequences that simply do not exist in a skilled nursing setting.

Mastering School-Based Documentation and Medicaid Billing

Documentation shifts from medical necessity narratives to educationally relevant service notes. Schools often bill Medicaid for eligible students, but the codes, platforms, and audit requirements differ sharply from Medicare billing in facilities. In your first month, visit your state's Medicaid office website and locate the SLP billing manual specifically for school-based services. Compare its documentation requirements to the Medicare Benefit Policy Manual you used in the ALF; you will notice differences in supervision rules, encounter documentation, and what qualifies as a billable session. If you want a broader look at how federal speech therapy programs fund school services, reviewing that landscape can help you understand why billing rules vary so much across districts. Then, ask your district's special education coordinator for a list of commonly used billing platforms, such as IEP Direct, Go Solutions, or state-specific systems, and request their documentation templates. Using the approved template from day one prevents rework later.

Building a Support System and Finding Your Rhythm

You will not have a rehab director or MDS coordinator to lean on, but schools have their own support structures. Introduce yourself to the special education team, the school psychologist, and related service providers. Ask for a mentor, even informally. If your district does not assign one, seek out a veteran SLP who can show you how they schedule groups, manage makeup sessions, and navigate recess duties. The first 90 days are demanding, but by establishing good habits early, like blocking time for documentation, setting caseload caps through workload advocacy, and clarifying building-level procedures, you will set the stage for a sustainable and fulfilling school-based career.

Common Questions About Switching From ALF to School SLP

Transitioning from an assisted living facility to a school setting raises practical questions about credentials, caseloads, and compensation. Below are answers to the most common concerns SLPs have when considering this career change.

Is speech pathology oversaturated?
Speech-language pathology is not considered oversaturated as of 2026. The Bureau of Labor Statistics projects job growth of roughly 19% through 2032, which is much faster than the national average. School districts across the country report ongoing shortages, particularly in rural areas. Demand for school based SLPs continues to outpace supply, making this an opportune time to transition into the education setting.
Can you work in schools with only adult SLP experience?
Yes. Most states and school districts do not require prior pediatric experience for hire. Your CCC-SLP credential and state licensure qualify you to practice across populations. However, hiring committees will want to see that you understand childhood speech and language disorders, IEP processes, and collaborative service delivery. Highlighting transferable skills from your ALF work, such as interdisciplinary teamwork and treatment planning, can strengthen your candidacy.
What certifications do you need to work as an SLP in schools?
At a minimum, you need your ASHA Certificate of Clinical Competence in Speech-Language Pathology (CCC-SLP) and a valid state license. Many states also require a separate educational credential or school services certificate issued by the state department of education. Requirements vary significantly, so check your state's guidelines. Some states accept your CCC-SLP in lieu of additional certification, while others mandate specific coursework or a Praxis exam.
How does an ALF SLP caseload differ from a school SLP caseload?
ALF caseloads tend to focus on dysphagia, cognitive communication disorders, and adult neurogenic conditions, typically serving 6 to 10 patients per day. School SLP caseloads center on articulation, language, fluency, and social communication in children, often carrying 40 to 80 or more students across multiple grade levels. Documentation also shifts from medical billing codes to IEP goals, progress monitoring, and Medicaid reimbursement through school districts.
How do I transition from ABA to school-based SLP?
If you hold a master's degree in speech-language pathology and your CCC-SLP, moving from an ABA setting to schools follows a similar path as the ALF transition. Focus on obtaining any required state educational credential, then pursue continuing education in school age language disorders and IEP development. Your background in data driven therapy, behavior support, and working with children on the autism spectrum translates well to school based service delivery.
Will I take a pay cut switching from ALF to schools?
It depends on your location and current compensation. School SLP salaries typically range from the mid $50,000s to over $90,000 depending on the state, district, and years of experience. ALF positions in skilled nursing or contract roles may offer higher hourly rates, but school positions often include benefits such as pension plans, health insurance, paid holidays, and summers off. When total compensation is factored in, many SLPs find school roles competitive.

Recent News

Recent Articles