Maggie earned her Master of Health Sciences in Speech-Language Pathology from the University of Missouri and her Bachelor of Science in Communication Sciences and Disorders from Kansas State University. She brings experience across pediatric outpatient, school-based, and inpatient rehabilitation settings, working with both children and adults with a wide range of communication and swallowing needs. Through her clinical rotations, Maggie has supported children with articulation, language, preschool language, social communication, augmentative and alternative communication (AAC), and feeding needs. She has experience conducting comprehensive speech-language and AAC evaluations, developing individualized treatment plans, providing evidence-based intervention, and collaborating with families to support functional communication.
Maggie has also gained experience in medical settings, supporting patients with cognitive, language, motor speech, voice, and dysphagia needs, including participation in instrumental swallow assessments and treatment planning. She has additional experience working with individuals with autism spectrum disorder and other neurodevelopmental differences, supporting communication, feeding, and daily participation.
Maggie’s clinical interests include language disorders, augmentative and alternative communication (AAC), autism spectrum disorder, feeding, and social communication. She is passionate about creating individualized, engaging therapy sessions and partnering with families and interdisciplinary teams to help children build meaningful communication, feeding, and participation skills.