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TEN TIPS TO EASE HOLIDAY TRAVELS WITH SPECIAL NEEDS CHILDREN:

The chaos of packing, airport crowds and security, lengthy car rides and yes, even overexposure to family and friends is enough to erode any holiday traveler’s festive spirit. Add traveling with children into the equation, especially when special needs are involved, and some parents might wish they could just stay home. But a few preparations, [...]

Help Me Calm Down!

Kids with sensory processing disorder often experience anxiety. They are overwhelmed by all the transitions and unpredictable events taking place in their daily lives, but often cannot pinpoint the source of their discomfort. They might become irritable and appear to be irrational. Tantrums often become a modus operandi to attract [...]

Travel Tips

Whether it’s noise or new faces, travel and a new environment can be challenging for children with autism or sensory integration disorder. Here are some helpful travel tips:
-Prepare the child in advance either verbally or with pictures
-Have the child choose something familiar to take along as a transition tool

-Bring materials that help the child [...]

How Playing Games Can Improve Skills

Playing games can be a great opportunity to teach kids life skills in a fun and relaxed setting. General skills that can be targeted, taught and/or improved include:
cognitive/reasoning skills
receptive and expressive language
developing vocabulary and spelling
use of prepositions and ordinals- fist, then, after
following multi-step directions
delayed gratification
peer interaction
working in a group
turn taking skills
resolving [...]

Autistic Perseveration

Perseverative behavior is a well known tendency among individuals with autism and similar disorders along the austistic spectrum. Repetitive movements, echolalic speech patterns, rigidity of thought, obsessive interests, and ritualistic behaviors have in fact become hallmark features of autistic disorders and are often used for diagnostic purposes. As clinicians, [...]

Who Has a Disorder?

Attention Deficit Disorder has a reputation as being a problematic condition that does not work in the classroom. In most schools, kids are required to sit, listen and write. They cannot pace, chew and listen. Or listen, multi-task, pace and sit.
If you are not familiar with ADD the second two options might sound [...]

Thank You

A year ago today, my 4-year-old daughter was scared to run. She cried at the playground and clung to my leg. She could not pump on a swing, climb the monkey bars or enjoy a see-saw. She shrieked in fright when a pack of 4-year-old boys and girls came too close. She [...]

It’s Summer! What’s Your Child’s Plan?

Backpacks and sweaters pepper the lawns while their young owners bike, run, skate, or just chat with each other. The sunshine feels warm and the air smells sweet and summer is clearly on its way. Though school buses will soon come down my street and break up this early morning scene, one can already [...]

Kids Have Feelings Too

My daughter would like to know who is on the phone. She has been cooperative all morning and shared with her brother. But now, she begs for my attention. The scene:
4 year old:”Mommmmy, who are you talking to?”
Myself (preoccupied) :”Mmmm”
4 year old (shrill) : “WHO?”
Myself (scattered): Um Hum
4 year old: “Waaaaa, tell [...]

Letting Go

We have dreams and expectations for our children. We are sure that they will be successful. Perhaps they will achieve what we were unable to accomplish. They will make ourselves and others proud.
But many of us get a curve ball. A child who is totally different - it can be personality, motivation, cognition, communicative [...]


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