sensory savvy 101 understand your child understand sensory integration understand how to help your...
TRANSCRIPT
Sensory Savvy101
Understand Your Child
Understand Sensory Integration
Understand How To Help Your Child
What I was told about Jaxson…
• Diagnosis: Autism• He would never: Talk• He would never: Look at me• He would never: Have any friends• The best I could do:
– Get him to eat with a spoon and fork– Have him potty-trained by the time he was 8 years
old– Get him ready for a group home
• “Once a duck, always a duck.”
What I did…
• I took The Son-Rise Program Start-Up
• Among tools I learned there, one strategy is crucial for today’s
discussion:
Always try to see things through my son’s eyes
Trying to connect with Jaxson in his world
Joining Jaxson in his world
Using Jaxson’s motivation to promote eye contact
• Before my son was diagnosed with autism, I knew very little about it.
Where I am today:
– Trained in the Wilbarger Protocol (sensory integration therapy)
– Trained in the Alert Program (sensory integration therapy)
– Bone Conduction Provider for The Listening Program® (auditory integration therapy)
– Certified as a Body Ecologist – The Body Ecology Diet
– Knowledgeable and have tried with my son the following diets: GF/CF, SCD and GAPS
– HANDLE® – Holistic Approach to Neurodevelopment and Learning Efficiency
– Working closely with my Defeat Autism Now doctor
– Taken all of The Son-Rise Program courses
– Director of Autism Education for Enzymedica (www.enzymedica.com)
My Autism Journey: From Novice To Expert
Jaxson’s Progress
• I decided to believe in my son
• Now Jaxson:– Talks in full, clear, 5 to 6-word sentences– Sings with me– Laughs and does things to be funny– Looks at me and make silly faces– Calls my name and tells me he loves me
Jaxson’s 6th Birthday!!
Jaxson Smiling For The Camera
Jaxson’s Friends
Super Jaxson!
Jaxson and Mommy
SensoryToolsAndResources
S.T.A.R.
Everything our children do, they do for a reason
Instead of trying to stop or change it, look for WHY they might be doing it Coping Self-regulation
Our children cannot process the sights, sounds, smells, and tactile sensations coming at them leads to “fight or flight”
Over-sensitivity vs. under-sensitivity
Imagine what YOU would do in these situations
Don’t ask: How can I change my child’s behavior? Instead ask: What is my child trying to accomplish by
their behavior, and how can I help them with this?
S.T.A.R. 1: Look Through Your Child’s Eyes
Hearing issues vs. auditory processing issues
Warm up, work out and cool down phase ABC Modular design™
The Listening Program – with Bone Conduction
www.thelisteningprogram.com
S.T.A.R. 2: The Listening Program®
Tactile issues
The Wilbarger Protocol – Brushing in a specific manner with joint compression every 2 hours
Created by Patricia Wilbarger
www.avanti-ed.com
S.T.A.R. 3: The Wilbarger Protocol
Attention issues (helpful for those with ASD and ADHD) Self-regulation Sets our kids up for success instead of failure
The Alert Program – Specific strategies to help our children self-regulate, especially in school environments
How Does your Engine run?®
www.alertprogram.com
S.T.A.R. 4: the Alert Program®
• Wide range of sensory integration and sensory processing issues
HANDLE – Holistic Approach to Neurodevelopment and Learning Efficiency
Exercises and activities to work the right and left hemispheres of the brain
Created by Judith Bluestone, author of The Fabric of Autism
www.handle.org
S.T.A.R. 5: HANDLE®
Social, relational, interpersonal development
The Son-Rise Program at the Autism Treatment Center of America™ – Tools for building communication, trust, social skills, and a love of human interaction
Today’s tools: Looking through your child’s eyes (discussed
earlier) Creating a distraction-free environment
Reduce competition/increase human interaction
Created by Barry Neil Kaufman (author of Son-Rise: The Miracle Continues) and Samahria Lyte Kaufman
www.autismtreatment.org
S.T.A.R. 6: The Son-Rise Program®
When your child is cranky and seemingly inconsolable…
Maybe the sensory overload is YOU
The 3 S’s: Slow, Silly, Shhhh – Back off, move slowly, keep you expression silly and animated – but quiet!
Created by Me – with lots of help from Jaxson!
www.hope4jaxson.com
S.T.A.R. 7: The 3 S’s: Slow, Silly, Shhhh
S.T.A.R. 8: Creating a Sensory Diet
The minute your child wake up, your diet begins
• Trampoline• Sensory boxes• Warm bath• Aromatherapy• Dimmers• Quiet music• Sensory toys