NACD - The National Association for Child Development

NACD Newsletter - Volume 5, Issue 6 - July 2012

Summer is halfway over already! We hope you are enjoying your summer and taking advantage of the opportunities that summer affords to accomplish lots of great program. The articles in this issue are aimed at helping you enjoy getting program done as part of your other summer activities. Remember--summer is prime time to get your kids ready for the next school year, especially when it comes to working on sequential processing (now super easy and fun with the Simply Smarter Kids app) and improving figure-ground processing with your TSI: Focused Attention program.  Happy summer, everyone!  
 
In this issue:
  1. Sequence the Summer Away! 
  2. Take Your Program to Go 
  3. Get Help!  
  4. Product Highlight: TSI - Focused Attention 
  5. Announcements 
  6. Upcoming Evaluation Dates
  Sequence the Summer Away!
by Sara Erling  

Ah, summer! It's the time that most of us spend outside--at the pool, relaxing in the sun, and just having fun. We often look at our NACD programs as a separate part of our day, but that doesn't have to be the case. You can make your program a part of your day and have fun doing it.   

 
Summer is a great time to advance your child's sequential processing. There are many fun ideas to incorporate while outside in the water or while playing in the back yard. It is simply a matter of remembering to look for opportunities. I hope the following suggestions spur you on to think about how to incorporate processing into your fun-filled days. 
 
Squirt guns - I have two boys and a girl. My boys LOVE squirt guns. We turn this into a processing activity like this: I hold the gun filled with water and give a sequence to one of the boys. If they get it right, I squirt them. They love it! (If your child doesn't like to get wet, then only squirt them if they get the sequence incorrect.) I switch between the two boys, squirting at them after getting a sequence correct. I only spend a few minutes doing it, but it produces very HIGH intensity! If they BOTH do well, then they get to squirt at me! 
 
For the little ones - take advantage of pool time, sprinklers, and playing at the park or swinging. My daughter loves me to throw her in the air while in the pool. She also likes jumping in. Before she does any of these, I give her a sequence. If she gets it right, she gets thrown or jumps in. If she doesn't, I might give it to her again or give her a different one that she can be successful with, and then provide the reinforcer. While at the park, she loves me to push her on the swing. So before a big push, I give her a sequence. I don't do it every time, just one here and there to keep it novel. But over the course of a day, she is getting many. They add up! 
 
If you are working on teaching 1-step directions to your child, the above activities work for that as well. They really provide a lot of intensity --lots of high frequency, but very SHORT bursts of duration. 
 
Outdoor scavenger hunts - "Go find something that is soft, two things that are green, and something that blooms." Give your child a bag and have them go out to the backyard and search away. This really challenges your child's working memory and conceptual thought. Ask for more and more items and be sure to give them different things to hunt each time. 
 
Hose/water sprayer - My middle son LOVES to water the flowers and anything else he can get wet. So it works well to give him sequences of things to water. So for example, "Marc, I would like for you to water the peppers, the purple petunias, the pink rose bush, then the snapdragons." Not only is he sequencing, he is learning the names of plants and flowers! 
 
Get the neighbor kids involved - In our neighborhood the kids are always playing together at some time during the day. They love for the adults to interact with them. I line them all up, give them each an auditory digit span (forward and reverse), and then let them earn a popsicle from our freezer. I promise-your neighbors won't mind if you improve their children's sequential processing! 
 
Water balloons - This is always a popular one for my boys. My son just recently received a water balloon-making machine for his birthday. If they do well on Simply Smarter, they get to throw water balloons at me for 5 minutes. (Haven't been hit yet!) 
 
For the older kids/adults - Schedule Simply Smarter into your day, rather than waiting for a convenient time to come along to do it. If you know that you have errands to run, lessons to attend, work to go to, program to get done with your children, etc., then schedule it! Each day look at your day and carve out 15-20 minutes to get it done. For me, the earlier the better! Reward yourself later with some fun in the sun! 
 
You can have fun with processing. Think outside the box, think about the activities, and make them part of your everyday experiences with your kids.
 

Have a great, safe summer!

 

Take Your Program to Go
by Ellen Doman

We are going to look at how your child's program or your own program can be taken on the road. As you head out for vacations or just a day at the beach or lake, the quandary becomes how to accomplish program and make progress when there are other events in life such as recreational outings that should and need to take place as well.

 

Many program pieces are highly portable and some of them actually make a trip more interesting. The advantage to taking program out and about with you is that it is more interesting that way. It is always good to get out of the house, away from the constant familiar surroundings, and into the wide world to stir things up a bit. To give you some ideas of how it is done, I will take some program pieces and describe ways to do them outside of the house. 
 
Flashcards can be placed on a single ring if you punch holes in the corner. You can flip through them, leaving them on the ring; but make sure that you take them off, shuffle them, and put them back on in a different order. Do not keep presenting them in the same order. Reading cards, math facts, receptive language cards, language photos, and unit study picture cards can all be put on rings to make them portable without losing them. They are perfect for waiting patiently at restaurants, appointments, or just waiting for everyone to get changed to go to the beach. They make waiting less boring, which is a wonderful thing.

 

 

Get Help!

by Vidya Guhan 

Care Worker with Kids

As parents, we are responsible for getting program done with our child. But we certainly don't have to do it all ourselves. We should think of ourselves as the managers or supervisors of our child's program. To be successful, especially in the long term, it is helpful to get a team of people you can train to do program for your child.   

 
The best people for your team are not the trained professionals, but family, friends, kids, and teens who have a positive relationship and interaction with your child and will follow your instructions. You want folks who do not have preconceived notions about what your child can or cannot do, and people who see your child as a child, first and foremost, not as a label or diagnosis. You want people who are energetic and have good intensity themselves. For these reasons, tweens and young teens tend to be wonderful program implementers. So delegate where you can. You will have more time to manage non-program activities, and your child will benefit from interacting with multiple people. 
 
Here are some suggestions for finding help (volunteers or paid): 
 
1. Consider asking family, siblings, cousins, grandparents, aunts, and uncles in the area. If they are not in the area, talk to them about helping to make therapeutic videos, audio recordings, flashcards etc. for your child. Most children will enjoy seeing favorite relatives on TV or hearing their voices on tapes, and this would free up your time considerably and keep your program going smoothly from week to week. 
 
2. Consider asking family friends, neighbors, church friends, homeschool friends, and their children. Many of us hesitate to ask, but our family and friends care about us and often want to help but don't know how. By asking for specific things, we bring them into our lives instead of shutting them out. Older children may be looking for babysitting positions as well.

 

 

PRODUCT SPOTLIGHT

TSI: Focused Attention 
  • TSI: Comprehensive Set Can improve a child's school performance.Designed to help with distractibility.
  • Designed to assist children and adults in attending better and focusing longer.
  • Training program to learn to filter out distracting background noise.
  • Is easy to use
  • Takes only a few minutes a day
  • Can improve your own job performance and social skills.
  • Is completely compatible with other sound therapy programs.
  • Available as a Basic Set (includes basic program) or
    Comprehensive Set (includes full program, headphones, and our BOOST program CDs) BEST VALUE

 

Visit www.tuneinandfocus.com to learn more about this and
our other Targeted Sound Intervention products.

ANNOUNCEMENTS
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WE'VE ADDED MORE FREE VIDEOS FOR YOU!   

Learning Disabilities & Attention Workshop
Learning Disabilities & Attention Workshop

Check out our YouTube channel to see our growing list of videos. We've just added MORE!  

 

On our YouTube channel you will find videos on the following topics:

Even if you've listened to these before, you'll want to listen again and again. You'll learn something new every time!

UPCOMING EVALUATIONS
UPCOMING EVALUATIONS
NACD  

July 2012

 

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NACD - The National Association for Child Development
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