Motor Issues in Autism

Description

Are some of your clients “self -directed” and/or “in their own world?” Are you dealing with reactive behaviors?
Do you have difficulty getting “engagement making” a connection? Do you find play and motor skills limited and/or perseverative? Are you encountering self-stimulatory behaviors and not sure what they mean? Do your students just want to “watch”? Are you exhausted at the end of some sessions? Join us as we focus on motor skills in ASD and evidence-based interventions that address motor as well as coexisting social and communicative challenges.

For decades, autism has been defined as a triad of deficits in social interaction, communication, and imaginative play. Children on the autistic spectrum may have difficulties with posture, coordination, and motor planning. Recent studies show that movement difficulties are common in children on the autistic spectrum, and poor motor skills are associated with greater difficulties with social communication. Participation in activities, building relationships, and reciprocal communication require neurological systems to coordinate and synchronize the processing, organization, and regulation of sensory information and movement. Differences in body awareness and motor planning can result in avoidance of, or poor response to, many activities that support motor development. Anxiety, self-regulatory and sensory processing challenges often respond to movement activities which enhance brain-body feedback for successful and organized engagement.

Location
Aurora, MA 02067
Date 8/23/2019 8:30 AM - 8/24/2019 4:00 PM (Check in 8:00 AM)
Sponsor Education Resources, Inc.
Trainer Anne Buckley-Reen
Contact Barbara Offringa (508) 359-6533 ddebello@educationresourcesinc.com
Principles 1. Support families
2. Active participation
3. Collaborative relationships
4. Specific IFSP goals
5. Comprehensive plans
6. Periodic monitoring
8. Quality services
Credit Hours 6.5 - Atypical Development
6.5 - Intervention
Cost 435.00
Status Closed