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It is always a joy to talk with businesses that offer services for our children and today on our show we have ABC School House Co-Founder and Director, Bobbi Barber. She is a Board Certified Behavior Analyst. Together with Hyndi Khomutetsky, also Co-Founder, they have 18 years experience in the field of Applied Behavior Analysis. They both have backgrounds in the public school system, in-home private therapy, out-patient treatment centers and residential facilities. ABC School House was founded on the principle that not every child learns in the same way. The program is unique in that the Individual Learning Plans and Behavior Intervention Plans are developed by Behavior Analysts and supervised Behavior Therapists.
Continue reading ‘Bright Feats Show 007:Interview with Bobbi Barber, Co-founder of ABC School House, a Center for Children with Autism and Related Disorders’
We had the pleasure of talking with Linda Brown. Linda is an Occupational Therapist who has worked with medically fragile children for over fifteen years. She is the owner of BrightStart Pediatrics and creator of the BrightStart program that meets the medical, developmental and social needs of the children they serve.
Continue reading ‘Bright Feats Show 006: A BrightStart for Medically Fragile Children’
We had the pleasure of talking with Sandy Wainman. Sandy is an Occupational Therapist and co-founder of LifeSkills, the first clinic specializing in Sensory Integration in the metropolitan Orlando area.
1. What is the definition of Sensory Integration and Sensory Processing Disorder? “It is a difficulty experienced by very good, intelligent children. It definitely has nothing to do with intelligence. Sometimes it looks like the kids aren’t trying because they get frustrated and it is hard to see why they act like they do. Sensory processing is when the intelligence is not getting the information that should be coming in that they really need about their bodies, what they need to make their bodies feel comfortable and ready to work. And it’s something you can’t see because you only know what their intelligence is. Sometimes we can see it in an infant when the child is sensitive to touch or being held. Some kids put their fingers in their ears or are very clingy. Children have a hard time sitting still, they fidget, move around and they just never stop moving. Some are picky eaters. So when we see this we see that sometimes the child isn’t as functional as we would expect them to be. If the child’s processing is not happening then it looks like there is a real discrepancy between what you expect them to do and what they do.”
Continue reading ‘Bright Feats Show 005: Helping your Child with Sensory Processing Disorder’