Some fun Games used in PT.
I loooveeee Rush Hour Jr for some of our higher functioning kids. Can work on visuospatial skills and problem solving and sequencing and frustration tolerance and more!! I also like the matrix game with clothespins and the card game Blink. Blink is great for attention and focus and matching and impulse control etc 🙂 by the way they have plain Rush Hour for older kids and all these games could be user with adults as well. Maybe in traumatic brain injury? TBI.
Unintentional humor…
For those of us who work with very literal children. Often seen in autism. I had a kid who thought he was on fire when a teacher used that expression for doing a good job. His eyes widened and he was like “really??!!” And looked down. Cutest first grader ever. 🙂
Celia: years of volunteer Greenspan
I love this picture. She is the reason I became an OT. I learned about OTs existence because she was getting it. I was in my early 20s.
Pool noodle uses inspired by Pinterest
Shosh kabob pool noodle and pool noodle alien. Can string as giant beads or pattern if you have different colors. And make cool things by stabbing the alien with sticks etc. But you would not say stab to the kids! Lolol
Mat man from handwriting without tears
The matman hanging in our school’s OT land! Ugh I am writing on my phone and it autocorrected three times to batman!
Using pins and cork board for OT equals awesomeness
The pictures show games made with Sharpie. Kids love pushpins. Obviously use careful supervision and judgment and don’t use them if they are not fully cognitively aware or unsafe. Pushpins are great to increase hand strength and dexterity that can help with writing as it somewhat forces them by design to use the radial precision part of the hand. Even an ugly board appeals as they love the pushpin part. 🙂
Simple English
Read this to find out how to get Wikipedia simplified, ie if in OT you are helping a child or someone with cognitive issues do research. They don’t all have simple english versions but it’s worth a try. If you click this link, read the top paragraph and it explains how. 🙂Â
The Pied Piper to Minimize special education stigma – OT thoughts
I’m sure I’ve said this before, but I use this to reflect so if it’s redundant, well, I’m reflecting again!!!Â
How to get to wear rings when you have arthritis and/or big joints.
So I learned about something relevant to OT and for once not about pediatrics! I learned about jewelers modifying wedding rings etc to be snapons for people who have big knuckles for whatever reason such as arthritis. So cool. Looks same on top and pretty discrete on bottom. See pictures of my friend’s ring. 🙂
Welcome to OT Land!
We have one school with an actual OT room out of our nine elementary schools. We call it OT land hence the picture. I also have a pic of my end of year paperwork. Plus a cool pool noodle creature my fellow OT made inspired by a Pinterest creation. And i forget the other picture (I am awkwardly doing this on my phone as I wait for my stitches to come out thanks to a little bout of basal something on my forehead bleh). I hope whatever that last picture is is self explanatory lol. Oh yeah. Just saw it. No not explanatory. The eyeballs on my lock at work have been there over a year now thanks due to the day I went eyeball bombing with a kid. Also I keep super fun key caps on my keys. My favorites are the monsters. The kids love them and it makes it so much easier and fun to find the right keys. Sometimes I give them to teachers as presents and they universally love them as do their students. Also the varying shapes of key caps (ie monsters vs cupcakes) could be used to help people with vision impairments to more easily distinguish between keys. 🙂