Sensory integration dysfunction

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    to be informed of the impact nutrition has on a child. Having the proper nutrition is important to maintaining good health, uneventful childhood development, and minimization to sensory overload. Uneventful childhood development includes; allergies, deifies, childhood dieses, and disruptive behaviors. Minimizing sensory overload is the sensitivity, how something feels, looks, and taste. Claire Capaldi…

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    all of his or her sensory systems at one time forcing him or her to focus on multiple stimulations at once. Every time the child catches the ball and tosses it back the exercise is repeated. With each repeat the patient’s neural connections improves. There is research evidence to support that the iLS program helps children with SPD function better in society. This was addressed in a study by Sarah A Schoen, A Pilot Study of Integrated Listening Systems for Children With Sensory Processing…

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    Ayres, who is known for her work on sensory integration, “maintained that the basic operating premise of the theory of sensory integration is that effective learning occurs when the senses are stimulated with incoming information” (Ragonese 3). The five senses have organs which are made up of cells that are connected to the nervous system. When there is an interruption…

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    feels like to be "normal"; even if it 's just for this one time. Reaching this monumental moment took years of commitment and therapy to help him cope with his sensitivity to sensory inputs. Jack has Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD), a complex neurological condition that often leaves individuals feeling overwhelmed by sensory stimuli. In the past, little time and money were spent on studying this disorder, but lately this has changed. Increases in neuroatypical diagnosis amongst children…

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    The intervention strategies the clinician will use to target Amanda’s specific language weakness are narratives and discourse. The client’s teacher main concerns were the areas of expressive language skills as well as limited vocabulary. The clinician will target narratives and discourse to increase the client’s expressive language skills. Research by McCabe and Bliss, supports that children should have the ability to provide with a minimum of two events in a narrative. The clinician can…

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    Sensory processing is the ability to neurologically organize information our body picks up from the environment around us. Sensory information is received from the peripheral nervous system, which consist of sensations from the skin, muscles and our senses, which then transmitted to the brain. The information is then integrated and the individual has an adaptive response. An individual is composed of eight senses, which are tactile, olfactory, gustatory, visual, auditory, vestibular,…

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    In the Language Context subtest area, the client obtained a standard score of 94 with a percentile rank of 34 and a confidence interval of 88-100. This standard score is within normal functional limits. In the Language Structure subtest area, Bernie obtained a standard score of 85 with a percentile rank of 16 with a confidence interval of 79-91. This standard score indicates a borderline average score. In the subtest area of Working Memory, the client obtained a standard score of 77 with a…

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    reading “The Out-of-Sync Child,” I had some experience with Sensory Processing Disorder, but had not done appropriate research of the diagnosis for a deeper understanding. There are many different ways children may be affected with sensory processing disorder. All senses are potentially affected and some children may have a more severe case than others. The book defines SPD as “difficulty in the way the brain takes in, organizes and uses sensory information, causing a person to have problems…

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    In the story of the Glass Castle Jeannette encounters countless events that significantly affect her security and well being. No child should ever be forced to find ways, (although clever), to meet their basic needs. Such as, warmth on a cold day, food when there is none, and safety when in danger. Section 1 begins with an incident that profoundly affected Jeannette to the point that she recalls it in detail. It 's my earliest memory. I was three years old…I was standing on a…

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    author uses sensory details to elucidate the terror that Martin perceives towards the woman. “And her blue eyes… were sharp and penetrating, boring into Martin’s face.” (Sleator 28). To interpret, as the lady stares at Martin, he starts to exaggerate the details of her facial features. One’s eyes could never possibly bore into another’s face. If one is afraid of someone, it is because their actions seem threatening or out of the ordinary which is explained in this scene. The sensory details…

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