Clarification of the Use of Teachers of the Speech and Hearing Handicapped Working for 4410 Programs
This policy memorandum is intended to clarify what services can be provided by a teacher of the speech and hearing handicapped (TSHH) to preschool students with disabilities through a special education program approved pursuant to §4410 of the Ϲ Law, and which services require that the provider be fully licensed as a speech-language pathologist (SLP) pursuant to Article 159 of the Ϲ Law. This clarification is intended to supplement previous policy memoranda issued by the State Ϲ Department inJulyԻNovemberof 1995 related to this matter, and to respond to recent inquiries received by the Department.
Section 8202 of the Ϲ Law requires that all persons who practice speech-language pathology be licensed as speech-language pathologists or be otherwise authorized to practice under Article 159. Section 8207(2) provides an exemption that would enable those who are employed by a government or in a school to practice without a license. That section states that the licensure requirement shall not be construed as prohibiting:
Any person employed by the federal, state or local government or by a public or non-public elementary or secondary school or an institution of higher learning from performing the duties of a speech-language pathologist, an audiologist, a teacher of the speech and hearing handicapped, or a teacher of the deaf in the course of such employment.
The central issues addressed below respond to recent inquiries from the field, and are provided in a question and answer format, similar to the Department’s November 1995 memorandum.
For additional information, please contact your Special Ϲ Quality Assurance Office or the State Board for Speech-Language Pathology and Audiology, at (518) 474-3817 x 100 or SPEECHBD@nysed.gov.

