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Occupational Therapy enables children to develop and acquire the skills needed for
success at home and in school. Occupational Therapy facilitates a child's growth,
development and acquisition of skills. This will greatly impact his or her performance
in everyday activities.
What is Occupational Therapy?
Occupational Therapy is needed for those children, both early childhood and school
age, who display difficulties with:
A registered and licensed Occupational Therapist can deliver the appropriate services
based upon each individual:
Visual Perceptual Skills
Therapists will interpret what areas the child is having difficulty in order to help the child improve in school play.Visual perception is the ability to make sense of what is seen. Typical children and adults easily recognize that a square has four sharp corners or that a square turned on its side is a diamond. Visual perception can be separated into several skill areas.
Children with difficulties within this skill area do not automatically pick up the
visual details like you or I. They typically do not like puzzles, mazes, dot-
Sensory experiences include touch, movement, body awareness, sight, sound, and the
pull of gravity. The process of the brain organizing and interpreting this information
is called sensory integration. Sensory integration provides a crucial foundation
for later, more complex learning and behavior For most children, sensory integration
develops in the course of ordinary childhood activities. Motor planning ability is
a natural outcome of the process, as is the ability to adapt to incoming sensations.
But for some children, sensory integration does not develop as efficiently as it
should. When the process is disordered, a number of problems in learning, development,
or behavior may become evident. If a child is suspected of having a sensory integrative
disorder, an evaluation can be conducted by a qualified occupational therapist.
Therapeutic Listening is a sensory technique targeting the vestibular and auditory
systems through specially designed music and equipment. Provided by certified therapists,
this tool can be a wonderful adjunct to traditional therapies and can positively
affect many areas related to sensory-
One of many techniques the therapist uses is the Handwriting Without Tears approach.
This is a simple, developmentally based curriculum for writing readiness, printing
and cursive. It is a multi-
Oral motor therapy utilizes techniques that increase the coordination, tone, and
muscle strength of the face and oral structures including the tongue, lips, and jaw.
Improved oral motor abilities can lead to improved, feeding, swallowing and articulation
skills. Therapists will address children who are picky eaters and who have aversions
to foods.
http://www.sensory-
http://www.brighttots.com/sensory_integration.html
http://www.thelisteningprogram.com
http://vitallinks.net
Handwriting/Fine Motor Skills
Oral Motor