Speech therapists group moves to delete DEI from their standards guide

Article/Op-Ed
A speech therapist kneels in front of a young girl in a classroom
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July 9, 2025

Sarah Carr’s latest piece for The Hechinger Report explores the quiet, controversial push to remove DEI from speech therapist certification standards—and the wave of pushback it has sparked.

Scores of speech therapists across the country erupted last month when their leading professional association said it was considering dropping language calling for diversity, equity and inclusion and “cultural competence” in their certification standards. Those values could be replaced in some standards with a much more amorphous emphasis on “person-centered care.” 

“The decision to propose these modifications was not made lightly,” wrote officials of the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA) in a June letter to members. They noted that due to recent executive orders related to DEI, even terminology that “is lawfully applied and considered essential for clinical practice … could put ASHA’s certification programs at risk.”

Yet in the eyes of experts and some speech pathologists, the change would further imperil getting quality help to a group that’s long been grossly underserved: young children with speech delays who live in households where English is not the primary language spoken. 

Read more here.

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