Archive for August, 2011

How to Help Your Child With Autism Begin The School Day

The beginning of the school year, and the start of each school day, can create potentially stressful situations for you and your child with Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD). Most children with Autism not only need routines, they require them in order to cope with an ever-changing environment. This article is designed to help prepare your child for the transition to a new year and for the beginning of each school day.

For children with autism, who typically have difficulty with transitions, the daily requirement of getting up and ready for school can cause tremendous stress and frustration. Starting school can present extreme difficulties for children with autism because children with ASD are required to conform to unpredictable and demanding schedules, rules, behaviors, and social norms.

As you prepare your child for a school year, begin by introducing new school supplies gradually. When purchasing clothing attempt to keep within the parameters of what fabrics, colors, and textures are suitable for your child. Tags may need to be cut out of clothes and all items should be clearly labeled. Depending on your child’s specific needs, select materials that will appeal to his or her unique interests. For example, your child may want a certain cartoon character on his or her lunch box. For another children, this might pose too much of a distraction. Item can be purchased, set aside out of view, and introduced gradually. By the time school begins, however, your child needs to have the chance to become acquainted with each new item.

Visit the school, discuss, and walk through routines. For example, pack your child’s lunch box and have a picnic in the lunch area at the school prior to the beginning of the year. As teachers begin to set up their new classrooms plan to visit the school. If possible take your child to see the classroom, the nurse’s office, the library, etc. You also have the right to arrange a meeting before the school year starts. This is a good opportunity to get to know the team members and to make certain that your child’s Individualized Education Plan (IEP) is up-to-date. Discuss concerns with the support staff and let the school know what your child needs in order to be successful. Request a follow-up meeting a week or two after the year begins to iron make adjustments.

Many children with autism respond well to visual stimuli and are comforted by what is familiar; establishing and maintaining a daily routine helps your child feel secure. Create a daily picture schedule to help your child prepare for the day and to transition between home and the external world. You may want to use picture cards. These cards can be laminated and attached with Velcro to laminated cardboard. This daily schedule will help your child with transitions. The picture schedule includes photos in chronological order that represent key transitional activities. Pictorial schedules may, but do not have to, include captions. If a picture schedule is used at home it may readily be adapted into the school setting. A picture symbol, such as a question mark, can indicate when an unexpected or unpredictable event may occur. Becoming familiar with such a symbol will help even the unexpected become more predictable. Another idea is to use timers and alarms to indicate the time for a transition from one activity to another. Your child’s temperament will help in determining which schedules and devices will alleviates rather than promote anxiety.

Social stories that explain procedures and routines may also help your child to understand events and behavioral expectations.

Keep an open line of communication with the school, particularly the principal and teacher(s). While email is helpful, communication logs provide a hands-on method for relaying information between home and school. A small notebook for daily comments can eliminate hours of frustration for your child and his or her caretakers/teachers. Any change in routine can be documented in order to facilitate an understanding of unsettling events or changes in your child’s routine.

Bedrooms for Educating Visually Impaired Children

Designing a bedroom for a visually impaired child can be a challenging task. With some understanding of your child’s visual impairment and careful preparation and planning in the design process, you can create a practical, safe and engaging bedroom.

A great start in the design process is to involve your child in the planning and design process wherever possible. Discuss their likes and dislikes and their hopes, needs and wishes for the room.

It’s important to always consider safety throughout the decorating process. If your child is required to use a cane, then make sure the bedroom is easy for them to navigate and completely clutter free. Keep the area around the bed clear so that they can move about safely. Ensure that the path to the bathroom is clear and easy to navigate to eliminate stumbling.

It’s more than likely that a child who is visually impaired or with special needs will spend more time in their bedroom than other children, so make the room as comforting and practical as possible. If a child is blind or visually impaired, they have to rely on their secondary senses, so have toys in an accessible position in the room that can encourage and develop on their secondary senses.

Placing hooks at your child’s reaching height and within easy reach for commonly used items, such as bed robes and jackets are a great idea. It’s important to ensure that your child can maintain their independence wherever possible, while also keeping safety a priority.

Alphabet Stencils

The application and uses of wall stencils can be a very attractive and easy means of giving an entirely new look to your home walls. These are inexpensive and affordable for the variations that they are capable of providing. Apart from designs, there is also an equal use of stencils for writing purposes on the walls.

You will be amazed to see a huge stock of quotes and sayings to even creative messages that have been categorized for the different areas of a house. These are sometimes incredibly funny and hilarious and at other places extremely meaningful and loving. It is just what your home needs to put a smile on your face every time you see them.

There are companies where stencils are made professionally. If you are looking for the right message or design, you can avail their stocks as well. There are also plenty of resources to be availed on the internet through the websites of some companies.

Alphabet Stencils

Designs and patterns or even continuous writing isn’t the only thing that can be made for a stencil. There are other types of stencils available and these are put to a numerous different uses too. Let us consider alphabet stencils. These can replicate alphabets in various designs and sizes. And they are also available in capital letters and lower case letters.

You can use them not only on home walls but also in classrooms and school nurseries. Their application on the walls of the children’s room can enable a better learning and recognition of the same for your child who is in the process of learning alphabets. Nevertheless, their uses in schools are multiple.

You can use them in crafts classes for cutting and coloring work among children of certain age groups. These can also be downloaded in various sizes for placement on the walls and boards of the classes. Children can be more interested in learning from these.

You can customize them as per your needs regarding font sizes and the use of styles and color in these stencils.

Large Alphabet Stencils

There are stencils that can be made for large alphabets. These are useful for signage uses and notification purposes. Here too you can make a choice of different fonts of the alphabets as well as the style.