Holly Rubinstein
M.A. CCC-SLP
Clinical Supervisor & Consultant
Holly Rubinstein is a Speech Language Pathologist holding a Certificate of Clinical Competence (CCC-SLP) through the American Speech-Language-Hearing Association (ASHA), with licenses from both Connecticut and New York State. She earned her Master’s of Arts in Speech-Language Pathology from CUNY Queens College and is a Bridging-Level (Level II) PROMPT trained therapist. Prior to joining the Team at Lindsay Scott SLP & Co. LLC, Holly enjoyed learning from two PROMPT Certified Instructors and providing Speech and Language Therapy at Jennifer Eigen, SLP-PC in Brooklyn Heights, NY for three years.
Holly is a recognized provider for Childhood Apraxia of Speech (CAS) through ChildApraxiaTreatment.org, and completed Advanced Training on Diagnosis and Treatment of Childhood Apraxia of Speech and the DTTC (Dynamic Temporal Tactile Cueing) approach for treatment with Dr. Edythe Strand Ph.D., in December 2019. Holly is also trained in Orofacial Myology including Guided Oral Movements with Active Patterning (GOMAP) for Infant & Toddler Feeding, through IAOM (International Association of Orofacial Myology), 2020.
Holly currently provides Clinical Supervision & Mentorship to Speech Language Pathologist-Clinical Fellows (CF-SLPs) on a variety of skills including Evaluation and Treatment of Motor Speech Disorders. She also provides Full-Staff Trainings & Presentations on Evidence Based Motor Speech Assessment and Intervention Protocols, within the practice and for schools that Lindsay Scott SLP & Co. LLC. services. Holly also conducted & Co-Authored Research on “A Bootcamp Approach to the Remediation of /r/: A Case Series,” with Dr. Avinash Mishra Ph.D. CCC-SLP, Dr. Lindsay Scott, CCC-SLP-D, and Sandra Lummis MS CCC-SLP, which was presented in the ASHA Conference Virtual Library 2021: Motor Speech Disorders Across the Lifespan, Nov., 2021. Holly also Consults within the practice on evaluation and treatment for a broad range of developmental, atypical or neurogenic motor speech disorders.
