Guest guest Posted September 12, 2006 Report Share Posted September 12, 2006 Dear Diane- What did you notice with the EPA's? My son is about to turn 8- would love to hear more from you. With I've also spent afternoons at the SLP and OT. I've done the fish oils before and have restarted them. He's in 2nd grade and we are going to the neuropsychologist to get more info. This site is really great! Thanks very much. Liz Conjoin5 <conjoin5@...> wrote: Thanks to all that replied to my post. Its great to hear what everyone is doing and has done. Also, the suggestions were appreciated too. I've been trained in several programs for reading, sensory integration and lost of observing the SLP and OT. I feel like it takes a team effort to help our little guys that are not our big guys. We started the Vit. E this week. I'm taking notes daily. It will be interesting as the Vit E results come in. The EPA's has been a big boost for Caleb since he was 5 (now 9) I hope the Vit E gives him a boost to get past this wall we've hit. Again, Thanks for all the info. I really appreciate it. Blessings, Diane Mom to Caleb 9 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2006 Report Share Posted September 12, 2006 Dear Diane- What did you notice with the EPA's? My son is about to turn 8- would love to hear more from you. With I've also spent afternoons at the SLP and OT. I've done the fish oils before and have restarted them. He's in 2nd grade and we are going to the neuropsychologist to get more info. This site is really great! Thanks very much. Liz Conjoin5 <conjoin5@...> wrote: Thanks to all that replied to my post. Its great to hear what everyone is doing and has done. Also, the suggestions were appreciated too. I've been trained in several programs for reading, sensory integration and lost of observing the SLP and OT. I feel like it takes a team effort to help our little guys that are not our big guys. We started the Vit. E this week. I'm taking notes daily. It will be interesting as the Vit E results come in. The EPA's has been a big boost for Caleb since he was 5 (now 9) I hope the Vit E gives him a boost to get past this wall we've hit. Again, Thanks for all the info. I really appreciate it. Blessings, Diane Mom to Caleb 9 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2006 Report Share Posted September 12, 2006 Dear Diane- What did you notice with the EPA's? My son is about to turn 8- would love to hear more from you. With I've also spent afternoons at the SLP and OT. I've done the fish oils before and have restarted them. He's in 2nd grade and we are going to the neuropsychologist to get more info. This site is really great! Thanks very much. Liz Conjoin5 <conjoin5@...> wrote: Thanks to all that replied to my post. Its great to hear what everyone is doing and has done. Also, the suggestions were appreciated too. I've been trained in several programs for reading, sensory integration and lost of observing the SLP and OT. I feel like it takes a team effort to help our little guys that are not our big guys. We started the Vit. E this week. I'm taking notes daily. It will be interesting as the Vit E results come in. The EPA's has been a big boost for Caleb since he was 5 (now 9) I hope the Vit E gives him a boost to get past this wall we've hit. Again, Thanks for all the info. I really appreciate it. Blessings, Diane Mom to Caleb 9 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2006 Report Share Posted September 12, 2006 Dear Joanne- I'm not sure if my reply yesterday got sent-still getting used to the blog sites... Funny you should ask about a neuropyschologist- i'm just about to get our appointment dates for one. Hopefully we should get a clearer and more comprehensive view of what we are looking at in terms of his issues. I'm glad i have the time to address 's " other " emerging LD issues (assuming they are emerging- they probably were always there and i didn't notice or it wasn't pressing.) Having a kid(s) with " issues " really is an on-going lesson in learning, observing and advocating. I took much of last year to address 's brother and get his diagnosis of inattentive ADHD, and now that i am back to - there is a new layer of info to learn and sort through! I do find the subject matter interesting though! has had OT and SLP at school last year and I did not pile on any other therapies b/c 1st grade is so intense. also goes to the Resource room for reading at school. Depending on the results of the neuropsch. i am sure we will add something outside of school this year as it seems that 2nd grade is a catch-up year. I am conscious too of balancing fun self-esteem building activites for him with " work " . is getting more conscious of his failings- yesterday he was annoyed that he got so many wrong on his spelling test when he knew he knew them... DO you have any advice in advocating for your child in the school? My style is to be part of the solution not the problem and to honor the dedication of the special ed folks. (they are good people). We have a new principal who has a phd in special ed and a his child who wears hearing aids and attends our school. I thought i might be able to touch on his self-interest (veiled as it may be ) and his background to improve the resource room and try to get some accomodations for . The resource room at school is NOT at par with the other special ed services at the school. I need to advocate (once i know what to advocate for ) some more training of the folks in the resource room, or to change their approach to in their teaching method. (THey've never seen anyone like him before). They are just poking at wholes without much of an approach based on experience with someone like . Ideally i would like to see better educated and enthused people in there- but that is probably not going to happen. I live in a small community -an island of 27,000 folks and in a small town setting-- so I REally need to be kind to people. IN terms of therapies- did you try the Tomatis method- i was exposed to it and decided not to complicate the matter for . Back to you- do your other kids have issues? If they are girls- the chance is reduced... Thanks again- have a great day, Liz Joanne Mulholland <mulholland34@...> wrote: Dear Liz, Have you gotten a diagnosis or a complete workup on your son's cognitive, emotional, and academic abilities? This is usually done through a neuropsychologist. Have you looked at PACE www.processingskills.com or read the book by Dorinne " Sound Bodies for Sound Minds " www.thedaviscenter.com There also was information on this messageboard regarding a pyramid for child development. Here is a theory (can't recall where I got this from - sorry to who ever should be cited here) of the learning pyramid of a child's development: Child development is a pyramid. The broad bottom layer is genetic heritage, which we cannot change. The next layer up is sensory development -- the major areas being motor development, visual efficiency skills (accommodation, convergence, etc.) and hearing, and the integration of these areas (visual-motor integration, visual-auditory, etc.). The layer on top of this is cognitive skills acquisition -- skills such as attention (ability to sustain focus, ability to sustain focus in the presence of distractions, ability to multi-task), visual processing, visual short-term memory, auditory processing, auditory short-term memory, sequencing skills, reasoning and logic, etc. The very peak of the pyramid is academic learning. Everything underneath affects the peak. Children with learning disabilities typically have a brick missing here and there throughout the pyramid. The farther down the holes are, the more profound their impact on the upper layers. From a remediation standpoint, it is best to repair the layers starting at the bottom so that you are always building on as firm a foundation as you can establish. This means that, ideally, you first find out if there are sensory level problems in the areas of motor skills development, vision and auditory processing. If so, you work on reducing these deficits first. Therapies that address sensory level problems include sound therapies (TLP, Tomatis, Samonas, AIT, FastForWord), vision therapy, speech/language therapy and occupational therapy (including Balametrics, Bal-A-Vis-X, NeuroNet, Interactive Metronome, biofeedback, etc.). Any time there are sensory level deficits, there will be corresponding lags in cognitive skills development. Once sensory level deficits are reduced as much as possible or ruled out, the next logical step is to check cognitive skills. Programs that address cognitive skills development include Audiblox, BrainSkills, PACE, and Instrumental Enrichment (Feuerstein's approach). Once cognitive skills have been developed as optimally as possible, the very last step is academic remediation. If all of the layers below the peak have been repaired, academic remediation will proceed much faster than if the holes had been left. Furthermore, with a solid foundation underneath it, the size of the peak will be larger. Therapies require a lot of effort on the part of the child, so it is definitely not desirable to try to add them to an already stressful full-day of school. Some families pull their children out of school for the therapy, some families do them during summer vacation, and some families homeschool in order to fit them in. My son has been to many therapists and treatments including Occupational therapist Speech therapist Developmental Optometrist - vision therapy, PACE and Master the Code. Audiologist specializing in sound therapy, Fast Forword, Interactive Metronome, mood Bell Each professional has successfully brought him to his age appropriate skills in time, so we move up the pyramid closing up the holes. There have been no guarantees, and lots of time and patience with all involved (and money, too). Every child learns differently and has other issues. I can only tell you what I did for my child. You know your child best and seem to have done a good job thus far. I know what its like to have other children (I have 4) and the oldest just went off to college. My son is the youngest and only boy. I was told not to rush the treatments, but to try to complete the treatment plan by 12 years old. Initially, the age of 2, I had my son's blood tested and sent into Smokies Lab where they found a high copper level and low zinc level together with a leaky gut. A DAN nutritionist balanced out his issues and it seemed like he came out of the fog. My husband blames me for taking the aggression out of my son, where I blame the omegas. All the best, Joanne P.S. Please check with your doctor before giving supplements with the ADHD meds. _____ From: [mailto: ] On Behalf Of lizpowell165 Sent: Saturday, September 09, 2006 1:02 PM Subject: [ ] Re: Do you have older apraxic children? > Dear Joanne, Thanks for your info. In terms of my attention and involvement in the apraxia world- i have 3 kids- and spent the last year attending to the oldest when he was diagnosised with ADD. My youngest is now off to kindergarten allowing me time to refocus on my 2nd grader with ADHD and apraxia. I was a strong advocate for him- he has been getting SLP services since he was 2 lately OT services. In between that time we had another kid and moved overseas and back. Never a dull routine moment! So yes there is info on the net- but one needs to figure out how valid the info is. WE had done the fish oils last winter and after my session on this page i dashed down and got some more! My son is also on meds for his ADHD. Between the ADHD and the apraxia i do know there are co-morbid issues and i have just finished a reading assessment for him to determine what are the stumbling blocks---- aspects of the ADHD or apraxia? He definately has a slow prcessing speed- what was your experience with the decoding processing speed? What are the remedies/therapies? I'm already aware that he will have language issues through out his schooling. I'm with you on maintaining/protecting their self esteem- it is a fine balance between doing what is needed to survive in school society in which the kids live and supplementing their interests and self esteem through outside activities! Thanks so much for your thoughts and direction. Liz > There's a wealth of information on the Internet designed to help > parents whose children have ADHD, dyslexia, dyspraxia, apraxia and > other learning difficulties. Here are some links that are well worth a > visit > > http://www.drstordy <http://www.drstordy.com/resources.html> ..com/resources.html > > Are you doing other therapy besides speech? I would look into > supplementing with Omega oils. See if there is any change and add > Vitamin E three months later. Some ADHD patients benefit to stay > focused and attentive from the Omega oil (i use coromega an Omega 3 > only). My husband blames me for taking the aggression out of my son, > but I blame the omegas. > > Usually apraxia does not stand alone. There are hidden flags that > come undone as you progress, such as reading difficulties or written > expression. There may be an auditory processing disorder. My son > tested at 9.5 with a decoding processing disorder. You can take a CAP > test at 8 years old given by an audiologist who specializes in central > auditory processing. > > Like I said before, there are no magical cures for these disabilities, > they are a lifetime. If early intervention can allow our children to > learn, then their self esteem won't be questioned. > > > Joanne > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2006 Report Share Posted September 12, 2006 Dear Diane- What did you notice with the EPA's? My son is about to turn 8- would love to hear more from you. With I've also spent afternoons at the SLP and OT. I've done the fish oils before and have restarted them. He's in 2nd grade and we are going to the neuropsychologist to get more info. This site is really great! Thanks very much. Liz Conjoin5 <conjoin5@...> wrote: Thanks to all that replied to my post. Its great to hear what everyone is doing and has done. Also, the suggestions were appreciated too. I've been trained in several programs for reading, sensory integration and lost of observing the SLP and OT. I feel like it takes a team effort to help our little guys that are not our big guys. We started the Vit. E this week. I'm taking notes daily. It will be interesting as the Vit E results come in. The EPA's has been a big boost for Caleb since he was 5 (now 9) I hope the Vit E gives him a boost to get past this wall we've hit. Again, Thanks for all the info. I really appreciate it. Blessings, Diane Mom to Caleb 9 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2006 Report Share Posted September 12, 2006 Dear Diane- What did you notice with the EPA's? My son is about to turn 8- would love to hear more from you. With I've also spent afternoons at the SLP and OT. I've done the fish oils before and have restarted them. He's in 2nd grade and we are going to the neuropsychologist to get more info. This site is really great! Thanks very much. Liz Conjoin5 <conjoin5@...> wrote: Thanks to all that replied to my post. Its great to hear what everyone is doing and has done. Also, the suggestions were appreciated too. I've been trained in several programs for reading, sensory integration and lost of observing the SLP and OT. I feel like it takes a team effort to help our little guys that are not our big guys. We started the Vit. E this week. I'm taking notes daily. It will be interesting as the Vit E results come in. The EPA's has been a big boost for Caleb since he was 5 (now 9) I hope the Vit E gives him a boost to get past this wall we've hit. Again, Thanks for all the info. I really appreciate it. Blessings, Diane Mom to Caleb 9 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2006 Report Share Posted September 12, 2006 Dear Diane- What did you notice with the EPA's? My son is about to turn 8- would love to hear more from you. With I've also spent afternoons at the SLP and OT. I've done the fish oils before and have restarted them. He's in 2nd grade and we are going to the neuropsychologist to get more info. This site is really great! Thanks very much. Liz Conjoin5 <conjoin5@...> wrote: Thanks to all that replied to my post. Its great to hear what everyone is doing and has done. Also, the suggestions were appreciated too. I've been trained in several programs for reading, sensory integration and lost of observing the SLP and OT. I feel like it takes a team effort to help our little guys that are not our big guys. We started the Vit. E this week. I'm taking notes daily. It will be interesting as the Vit E results come in. The EPA's has been a big boost for Caleb since he was 5 (now 9) I hope the Vit E gives him a boost to get past this wall we've hit. Again, Thanks for all the info. I really appreciate it. Blessings, Diane Mom to Caleb 9 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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