SALE EXTENDED: Final 5 Days to Save on Speech Therapy Apps!


Good news! You've got a few more days to get a bargain on the best-selling apps for speech therapy!

Because we understand procrastination and hate for anyone to miss out, we've extended the sale until the end of this weekend - Sunday, May 19 - for you to get the apps you want at the best prices.

Go to the App Store or Play Store on your iOS or Android device to find all our speech therapy apps discounted up to 40% - no special codes required. All regular and sale prices are on our website in your currency: https://tactustherapy.com/apps/​

πŸ“± The iOS App Bundles offer the biggest savings. If you already have one or more of our apps, you can complete your bundle to get the rest for very little. The Tactus Aphasia Essentials app bundle is flying off the shelves this year. You get our 8 most popular apps for under $14 USD each!

πŸ€” Not sure what to buy? Find the right apps for you by answering 3 questions using our App Finder to get personalized recommendations.

🎁 You can even give an app as a gift to an iOS user! Apps are the perfect gift for the new SLP grad, therapist, or family member in your life who could use one of our tools.

Cheers,

Megan

P.S. πŸ’š Thank you so much to everyone who has already made a purchase or told someone else about our sale! We'll be back to our regular newsletters shortly - promise!

Tactus Therapy

We're a speech therapy software company making evidence-based treatment for adults with stroke, brain injury, and other conditions more accessible.

Read more from Tactus Therapy
A word web centered around the word "COOK," surrounded by related words and cooking images

In non-fluent aphasia, nouns tend to dominate verbal communication. It makes sense. They're concrete, visible, and easy to picture. But then your patient tries to tell you something:β€œGrandma. Raccoon. Garage.” Wait, what?!I need a verb. Immediately. Did Grandma feed the raccoon? Befriend the raccoon? Trap him? Name him? 🧠 Why verbs are harder "Apple" is a simple object. You can draw it, hold it, picture it instantly. "Kick" refuses to sit still. It's a soccer ball flying through the air, a...

Your brain keeps two records of everything you read. One stores the gist. This is the meaning, the shape of it, what it was roughly about. The other stores the verbatim trace: the actual words, the specific details, the data point in the third paragraph. The gist is durable. It sticks around, gets consolidated into long-term memory, and becomes part of what you "know." The verbatim trace is fragile. It starts degrading almost immediately. To be fair, it's supposed to. Retaining every word of...

A list of Tactus Therapy apps to work on reading

Reading a text message. Skimming a menu. Catching up on the news. Most of us don't think twice about these things... until we can't do them the way we used to. After a stroke or brain injury, reading often gets harder, slower, and more exhausting. If you've noticed this, you're not alone. 🧠 What's going on in the brain Reading isn't a single skill. It's a complex chain of steps your brain performs in a fraction of a second: recognizing letters, combining them into words, pulling meaning from...