| SHOP FOR SENSORY INTEGRATION THERAPY PRODUCTS & TOYS
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
Visit Us At

| |  | Plastic Figurines | Home » » Answers to Questions Teachers Ask about Sensory Integration: Forms, Checklists, and Practical Tools for Teachers and Parents | | | | | | | Description: | | In this elegant approach to the often-elusive subject of sensory integration, Carol Kranowitz, M.A. (author of the best-selling book The Out-of-Sync Child) and expert occupational therapists Stacey Szklut, MS, OTR/L, Lynn Balzer-Martin, PhD, OTR, Jane Koomar, PhD, OTR/L, FAOTA, Elizabeth Haber, MS, OTR/L, and Deanna Iris Sava, MS, OTR/L, have assembled an extensive and easy-to-use set of checklists and other tools that will be invaluable to every teacher (and parent) who has children with sensory processing challenges. You’ll find tried-and-true instructions for developing fine-motor, “organizing,” and motor-planning skills, and for providing an appropriate “Sensory Diet” that will benefit all your students. Checklists help you identify students who have difficulty processing sensory information. With up to 20% of the students in any given classroom affected by Sensory Processing Disorder, Answers to Questions is an invaluable resource for teachers of preschool through high school. Winner of Learning magazine's Teachers' Choice Award, this book and the tools within it will help teachers learn how to: - Recognize Sensory Processing Disorder
- Understand how Sensory Processing Disorder may interfere with a child’s motor coordination, muscle tone, fine motor skills, visual perception, and relationships with others
- Discern a child’s unique pattern of out-of-sync behavior
- Help a child recover after a meltdown
- Develop strategies to prevent future meltdowns
- Approach a child who is simultaneously oversensitive to one kind of stimulation and undersensitive to another kind
- Help children identify their own needs for the right amount of sensory stimulation
- Collaborate with parents, occupational therapists, and other professionals on a child’s behalf
- Provide a safe, appropriate, “sensory diet” in the classroom that will benefit all students
- Structure a calm and organized classroom
- Manage his or her own behavior when a child “pushes those buttons”
Finally, this book will help teachers to always remember that these are good children who are trying their best in a confusing world!
Contents include: - What Is Sensory Integration?
- What Is Occupational Therapy?
- How to Get the Most Out of Answers to Questions Teachers Ask
- Comparison of Typical Sensory Processing & Sensory Processing Disorder
- Organizing Sensory Input and Activities for the Classroom
- Classroom Accommodation Checklist
- Infants and Toddlers Checklist (Birth to Age Two)
- Preschool Checklist (Age Three to Four)
- School-Age Checklist (Age Five to Twelve)
- Adult/Adolescent Checklist (Age Twelve and Up)
- Balzer-Martin Preschool Screening—Teachers Checklist
- Characteristics of Tactile Dysfunction
- Characteristics of Vestibular Dysfunction
- Characteristics of Proprioceptive Dysfunction
- Characteristics of Visual Dysfunction
- Characteristics of Auditory Dysfunction
- Heavy Work Activities List for Teachers
- And more!
| | | Product Details: | | | Author:
| Jane Koomar | | Paperback:
| 63 pages | | Publisher:
| Future Horizons | | Publication Date:
| August 01, 2001 | | Language:
| English | | ISBN:
| 1932565469 | | Package Length:
| 10.8 inches | | Package Width:
| 8.0 inches | | Package Height:
| 0.3 inches | | Package Weight:
| 0.2 pounds | | Average Customer Rating:
| based on 18 reviews |
| |  | More Sensory Integration Products... | | | |
| | Customer Reviews: | |
Average Customer Review:
( 18 customer reviews )
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
33 of 33 found the following review helpful:
Just OKAug 30, 2009
By M.S. in Child Development I am a Pediatric Developmental Therapist and a mom. One of my children has Sensory Integration issues and I was looking for a way to help explain those issues to his preschool teacher. I feel this book is most appropriate for teachers who are looking to identify kids who they think have sensory problems. Over half the book is checklists for teachers. I wanted more explanation on what SID is and how to help children. Isn't that basically what we need? For people to understand what SID is and how to help the children impacted by it to function, learn and grow to the best of their ability. I also felt there was a lack of suggestions on how to get "optimal learning" from kids with SID. Most of the suggestions were geared towards older kids - "help the janitor," "carry copy paper from the storage closet to the office." Most 4 year-olds I know have a hard time doing those activities without supervision. There was some explanation about SID and some in-classroom exercises. It was just OK.
9 of 9 found the following review helpful:
Teachers loved it!Nov 26, 2007
By Lynn Light As an occupational therapist, it was a wonderful resource to share with the teachers and directors that I work with in schools. They talked about how they developed a better understanding of "odd" behaviors that they saw in class. They also liked the checklists.
6 of 6 found the following review helpful:
Great Tool for TeachersJul 04, 2010
By Sue S. Gave this book to my son's teacher. She was thrilled. It's full of tools to help her help her SPD (sensory processing disorder) students. With all that she is required to fit into a school day, she can't afford to lose time on a daily basis having to deal with my child or any other, reaching meltdown (sensory overload). With the checklists, both parents and teacher can be aware of a student's sensory problem areas, so they can be addressed. It's amazing that a student's being able to chew on something like a special necklace, or allowing them to do a few pushups can help their brain organize so they can be able to think, or listen, or comprehend, at the level of a "sensory normal" person. The acommodations are often inexpensive and not disruptive to the rest of the class; and they make all the difference to a student with SPD.
11 of 13 found the following review helpful:
Easy to use and understand resourceFeb 05, 2008
By Shelly Roy
"akmommax5"
When my sons ages 6 and 5 were diagnosed with sensory integration disorder I had no idea what in the world that was, or what it meant for my boys. Enter this handy book that answered so many of my questions. The lists and tips given are easy to understand-written for "real people" not those with doctorates in educational theory :)I have gone to this book again and again since purchasing it. If your child, or children you know or work with, has been diagnosed with sensory processing problems, this guide is a definitive answer for you! You can quickly and easily identify problem areas. I highly recommend this guide for those asking questions that seemingly have no answers.
5 of 5 found the following review helpful:
Great resource for the "lay person"Feb 04, 2009
By Special Ed Teacher Although I am a certified special education teacher, the area of sensory integration is one that I was very unfamiliar with. My special ed schooling contained little information on this very important area for learning disabled children. It was a real eye-opener to realize WHY my 5-7 year old children exhibit the behaviors they do. I now understand why they are always falling out of their seats, dropping their crayons, have poor motor control or have difficulty putting on their jackets. The best part is that not only does the book help you identify these behaviors, it provides practical strategies that can easily be incorporated into daily classroom routines. Nice resource to have.
See all 18 customer reviews on Amazon.com
| | |
Sensory Interventions was designed primarily to help parents and therapists find appropriate child therapy toys for helping children with Sensory Processing Disorders to develop Sensory Integration and acheive their maximum potential. Sensory Interventions carries many developmental toys which are also useful as Sensory Toys for Autism and Occupational Therapy Toys for Special Needs Children of all exceptionalities. Having had experience as a teacher, a sibling, and a parent of children with special needs, we at Sensory Interventions understand how complicated life can be and how so often, you just need a simple and sensible solution for your child's needs. At Sensory Interventions, we hope that we can provide a helpful and convenient source for one stop shopping and information for those special parents of children with special needs. As you travel down this special path, hand in hand, with your special child, we pray your journey will be "sensational." |