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Listening Creek

Remy's Listening Creek

Meet Remy — a curious raccoon sorting creek stones by the water at dusk! 🦝 Here is the idea: YOU say a word out loud in your own voice, plain or with a little playful bump, and your child listens and sorts a stone into the smooth basket or the bumpy basket. The app suggests the words and counts the sorts — it never listens, and there is no right or wrong. Pick a mode, say the word, and sort the stone by how it sounded. Take the next word when you are ready. Fill Remy's trail with ten sorts!

How to use it

You say the word out loud — plain, or with a little playful bump. The app never voices a bump, and it never listens.Your child sorts a stone into the smooth basket or the bumpy basket by how it sounded. There is no right or wrong.Take the next word when you are ready. Sort ten stones to fill Remy's trail.

Who's playing today?

Works on phone, tablet, or computer · turn sound on to hear each word plain

Clinical review pending — being verified by Julianne Abuda, MA, CCC-SLP.

Please note: This is a free fluency awareness tool for therapist- and parent-guided use, not a diagnostic tool or a replacement for therapy. Remy the raccoon sorts creek stones by the water; a grown-up says a suggested word out loud in their own voice — plain, or with a playful bump — and the child sorts a stone into the smooth basket or the bumpy basket by how it sounded. Because a browser voice cannot honestly produce a bumpy word, the app never voices a bump: the only thing the sound buttons ever say is the plain, natural word or a plain explanation of what a smooth or bumpy stone is. The app has no ears — it never records, listens to, times, or evaluates a child's speech — and it holds no answer key, so a sort is never right or wrong. Smooth stones and bumpy stones both belong in the creek; neither is where speech is supposed to go, and there is no score, no praise, and no correction. The self-listening mode, where the child sorts by what they heard in their own speech, is pure self-report and can be removed entirely. The device remembers only how many stones were sorted (a count, on this device), never anything about the speech itself. This is offered as a calm way to notice speech together, never as a fix for how a child talks or for stuttering.

Every GO Therapy interactive is AI-assisted and reviewed by a licensed speech-language pathologist.