4 min read

How to Survive Grad School - Tips from an SLP 👇🏼

Published on
August 26, 2025
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10 Tips to Thrive in SLP Grad School

By Sarah — SLP, June Residency Cohort Lead

TL;DR: Organization, curiosity, and thoughtful planning are your anchors in grad school. Ask questions early, build resources, track hours, welcome feedback, set boundaries, and lean into your cohort. Network smartly, prep thoroughly for exams, and always remember your why.

1) Stay Organized 📅

Track assignments, clinic hours, and meetings with a planner or digital calendar. Studies show that structured organization reduces stress and improves time management in graduate students.

Many SLPs recommend color-coding academic, clinical, and personal commitments to visualize workload balance instantly. This habit helps avoid burnout and maintains consistent engagement.

Pro Tip
Use calendar reminders 24 hours before deadlines to give yourself buffers—for prep and rest.

2) Ask Questions Early ❓

Your supervisors expect your questions—they’re part of your learning. Asking now builds skills you’ll rely on later when working independently with clients.

This aligns with best practice in clinical education: when novices ask more questions, they develop stronger metacognition and confidence over time.

3) Save Your Resources 📂

Archive therapy materials, cueing strategies, data sheets, and notes from grad school. These become your toolkit in clinical practice.

One seasoned clinician advises: “Your grad school resources may be more valuable in your first job than your resume.” They help you hit the ground running.

Why it matters: A personal resource library saves hours of prep time early in your career.

4) Track Your Hours Religiously ⏱️

ASHA’s requirements are specific: log client demographics, disorder types, and settings from day one. Procrastinating clinical hour logs can lead to rushed corrections—and stress.

A grad student shared on Reddit: “Grad school and mental health don’t mix well when you leave things to the end.” Consistent tracking avoids last-minute panic.

5) Be Open to Feedback & Self-reflection 💬

Clinical growth thrives on feedback—and on reflecting afterward. Embrace being uncomfortable—it’s often how true learning unfolds.

“Being uncomfortable will make you the best clinician you can be.”— Sarah

6) Set Boundaries 🛑

Grad school isn’t a prestige contest. Saying no to extra commitments is an act of self-care—and essential for longevity in your profession.

Prioritize one recharge activity weekly—be it downtime, exercise, or a short nature break. These pauses significantly improve resilience over time.

7) Lean on Your Cohort 🤝

Your classmates are your best support system. Share struggles, celebrate wins, and recognize your cohort as teammates—not competition.

As one student put it: “Keep balance in your life and remember you’ll be learning forever—so it doesn’t all have to happen right now.”

8) Explore Settings & Network Early 🌎

Sample different clinical contexts—schools, hospitals, home health. That exposure helps you refine your interests before committing long-term.

Network with supervisors and guest speakers. Their guidance and willingness to serve as references often become invaluable when job-hunting.

9) Prep Early for Comps & Praxis 📖

Create study outlines for each course as you go—don’t cram everything at the end. The cumulative method eases stress and improves retention.

One SLP prep guide suggests narrating concepts out loud to yourself regularly—it reinforces knowledge, especially for practical reasoning.

10) Remember Your Why 💡

When grad school gets tough, pause and reconnect with your mission—making a difference in clients’ lives. That purpose fuels perseverance during long days.

Many SLPs reflect back on their toughest semesters and say: “Remembering my why pulled me through.”

Key Takeaways

  • ✔️Use a planner and calendar reminders to manage your schedule and mental load efficiently.
  • ✔️Ask questions freely—it's how clinicians grow confident. Save resources for faster prep later.
  • ✔️Track hours rigorously and protect your wellbeing with boundaries and cohort support.
  • ✔️Explore clinical areas early, prep consistently for exams, and never lose sight of your bigger purpose.
Loved these tips? Share them with a fellow grad student—or keep them bookmarked as a reminder when grad school feels overwhelming.