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Building Blocks for Learning Occupational Therapy Approaches: Practical Strategies for the Inclusion of Special Needs in Primary School
Author(s): Jill Jenkinson (Author), Tessa Hyde (Author), Saffia Ahmad (Author)
Publisher: Wiley
Publication Date: October 27, 2008
Edition: 1st
Language: English
Print length: 448 pages
ISBN-10: 0470058579
ISBN-13: 9780470058572
Book Description
Building Blocks for Learning Occupational Therapy Approaches is a resource book for educational staff and pediatric occupational therapists, especially those new to the field. It shows how the implications of physical, psychological, social, and learning difficulties impact upon children’s abilities. This highly practical book will help readers recognize when a student’s poor performance within the classroom is a result of a medical condition or underlying motor and perceptual deficits.
Editorial Reviews
From the Inside Flap
A highly practical resource for the primary years written by the authors of the successful handbook Occupational Therapy Approaches for Secondary Special Needs. The reader is guided through the process of:
Observing a child’s performance in class
Identifying areas of foundation skills requiring attention
Planning programmes to develop foundation skills
Implementing classroom strategies
Resourcing equipment for interventions
The early years of a child’s life are crucial for laying down the foundations necessary to establish the building blocks for learning. Occupational Therapists specialise in assessing and treating motor, sensory, perceptual, social and emotional skills to develop inclusion for all children within primary school.
Chapters include:
Medical conditions seen in the classroom – Attention Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder, Autistic Spectrum Disorder, Cerebral Palsy, Developmental Co-ordination Disorder and some Physical Disabilities
Foundation skills – gross motor co-ordination, fine motor control, sensory processing, visual perception, language and social/emotional well being
Subject areas – teacher observations of foundation skills are compared with curriculum requirements
Practical ideas and advice on activities and programmes to build skills e.g. handwriting, hand function, sensory processing, organisation, social and emotional well being
Establishing activity clubs and managing transition from primary to secondary school
Equipment and suppliers
The information, which is easily accessible and clearly laid out, will prove to be an invaluable resource for all primary school Teachers, SENCOs, Teaching Assistants and Occupational Therapists.
…this immensely practical manual provides a wealth of workable strategies for enabling the busy teacher to individualise and differentiate learning resources to enable each child to maximise his potential. –Lois M. Addy, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, St John University, York
From the Back Cover
A highly practical resource for the primary years written by the authors of the successful handbook Occupational Therapy Approaches for Secondary Special Needs. The reader is guided through the process of:
Observing a child’s performance in class
Identifying areas of foundation skills requiring attention
Planning programmes to develop foundation skills
Implementing classroom strategies
Resourcing equipment for interventions
The early years of a child’s life are crucial for laying down the foundations necessary to establish the building blocks for learning. Occupational Therapists specialise in assessing and treating motor, sensory, perceptual, social and emotional skills to develop inclusion for all children within primary school.
Chapters include:
Medical conditions seen in the classroom – Attention Deficit / Hyperactivity Disorder, Autistic Spectrum Disorder, Cerebral Palsy, Developmental Co-ordination Disorder and some Physical Disabilities
Foundation skills – gross motor co-ordination, fine motor control, sensory processing, visual perception, language and social/emotional well being
Subject areas – teacher observations of foundation skills are compared with curriculum requirements
Practical ideas and advice on activities and programmes to build skills e.g. handwriting, hand function, sensory processing, organisation, social and emotional well being
Establishing activity clubs and managing transition from primary to secondary school
Equipment and suppliers
The information, which is easily accessible and clearly laid out, will prove to be an invaluable resource for all primary school Teachers, SENCOs, Teaching Assistants and Occupational Therapists.
“…this immensely practical manual provides a wealth of workable strategies for enabling the busy teacher to individualise and differentiate learning resources to enable each child to maximise his potential.” ―Lois M. Addy, Faculty of Health and Life Sciences, St John University, York