Occupational Therapy

17 Nov 2013

Rock

Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: none

15 Nov 2013

"You're Miss Awesomeness?"

A little girl mentioned she was going back to her room, and the boy I needed was in there. I wrote a little Post-it note for her to give it to him, saying “Dear Kid X, Please come to Room 202 to see Miss Awesomeness. PS, I drank mean juice this morning!!!!”

She skimmed it and looked at me and said “Ohhh, you’re Miss Awesomeness?” in the tone of “Ooohhhh, so that’s whose name I have heard.” I was like ISN’T IT OBVIOUS!!!!!! 😉 
I hadn’t thought about it quite that way – many of my kids reference coming up or going to see Miss Awesomeness, so I guess for classmates who don’t typically see me, it’s like hmmm who is this mystery lady.
I looooooove my kids. They melt me up daily. I wish so bad I had an extra five thousand hours a day to give each one of them all they need, daily, and also have enough time to BLOG about it, Pinterest it, etc. I have so many pictures I take of projects I want to share for example. Last few days has involved typical FCS as I now call it, aka Functional Classroom Skills, but I’ve also been adding in BUBBLE LETTERS, WACKY LOOP BRACELETS, basic 3-D shapes that look cool, and ZENTANGLES. All of which work on amazing skills but in ways that make them proud. More later when my eyeballs are not fusing shut. 
Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: none

15 Nov 2013

Dinovember – Celebrate fun!

Dinovember

I freaking LOVED this description/photographs of these parents staging elaborate dinosaur figurine events during November. Kids will remember that kind of silly whimsy all their lives. Kids these days seem to get plenty of screen time and structure time so it seems like they get more than enough play, but I would argue there is an INCREDIBLE deficit in more elaborate, unstructured, spontaneous play or appreciation of creativity just for the fun of it.

Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: none

12 Nov 2013

Super cool study on "occupation" with older adults

A MEANINGFUL ACTIVITY CAN MEAN THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN SURVIVE VERSUS THRIVE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! 

http://www.scilogs.com/next_regeneration/learning-digital-photography-improves-cognitive-function-older/

Great study done. Essentially asking older people to do puzzles and basic “cognitive” tasks didn’t do much, but if it was made meaningful/intriguing, they did awesome after a 14 week study. The digital photography group did the best, although there were other great combinations as well. I recommend skimming the article above, the take-away message is definitely the philosophy that occupational therapy espouses – activity without meaning is nearly worthless. Activities with meaning dramatically improve a variety of skills. 
I see it in my own life. I think we all do. Give us challenging tasks and whether we succeed depends heavily on motivation and meaning
One of my first “real life” examples of the importance of meaning was on a Level 1 OT 2-week fieldwork in a rehab setting, working with a patient who needed to improve standing tolerance. We did small activities that were “meaningful enough” while standing and he would tolerate roughly 3 minutes before needing to sit and take a break from it. I found out he was a big traveller and liked to talk about going all over the United States. I went and found a dollar store USA-states puzzle and asked him to pull out the states he loved the most and tell me about his adventures there, while completing the puzzle. He stayed up nearly eleven minutes as he was so engrossed. His activity tolerance that time was approximately THREE TIMES as long, due to MEANING.  OCCUPATION.
Survive + Occupational Therapy = Thrive
NEW TSHIRT LOGO BABY! It may already exist…usually my brilliance is always found to be too late 😉 ahahahaha
Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: none

6 Nov 2013

Sometimes our OT kids don't know what they don't know!

Fictional yet real-life typical scenario:
Jack is in the first grade and he is having a lot of trouble with letter formation. He is left-handed and his right-handed teacher always sits to his left-side when teaching, because of how her chair and his desk are situated. She carefully shows him how to make the letters, how to hold the pencil, and the sequence of strokes. Jack tries, but can’t seem to get it right. He grows frustrated with his inability, and she does as well, because she JUST SHOWED HIM. What she doesn’t realize is that all her careful work means almost nothing, because she is blocking his view the entire time and all he sees is the back of her hand doing some random/vague moments. This provides him with no useful information he can copy. Since Jack doesn’t realize there could be a better vantage point, he just assumes he is failing to understand. Both Jack and his teacher are unhappy with the outcome, because neither realize what the other is missing. Neither of them “know what they don’t know”. 
*Common sense rule #1: Common sense is not common. I have super amazing problem-solving genius engineers/rocket scientists parents not know which side to sit on when their kid is writing. 
If any of you have ideas or thoughts on how to best sit with the child depending on handedness or other factors (as maybe I’m missing something huge!) please share 🙂 
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Longer version (after I processed here, I went back up and wrote the minier version)

I’ve read stories about people who get glasses for the first time and are so shocked to realize that the individual leaves on the trees are something that everyone else has always seen. It’s not like a kid will realize that the “green fuzz” of a tree isn’t what everyone sees, if that’s all the kid has ever known.

I’ve noticed that a lot of our OT kids either “don’t know what they don’t know”, or are too scared to say something, or know something is wrong but don’t know how to make it right.
For example, if I am working with a right-handed child, I sit on their left-side since I’m left-handed. That way the child sees what I am doing with my fingers, and I can see what the child is doing. If I work with a left-hander, I sit on their right side, and when it’s time to write, I’m going to figure out whether it’s best for me to write with my right-hand for that child, or to write “around them” (like standing behind them and wrapping my hands so they are at the same angle as the child’s), or to write “above them” in a somewhat upside down stance for me. 
Luckily, most of my kids are right-handers, and so as a left-hander I just always stay on their left. I prefer to always be by their side rather than across from them, because I too have spatial issues and find spatial rotations challenging. It pays to practice handwriting with both hands. It’s fine if your non-dominant hand isn’t great, as long as it’s good enough. It’s like when you watch an expert do something on Youtube and it seems like it will never be achievable, but if you watch an amateur do it you are like oooh I can get there. So if your handwriting isn’t PERFECT with your non-dominant hand, that’s fine! 
You can also just switch back and forth depending on what you are doing, ie show the child on his left, then watch the child on his right, etc. 
The reason I went into this diatribe is because sometimes right-handed parents sit to the left side of their right-handed child without even thinking about it. The parent can see what the child is doing, but the child can NOT see what the parent is doing. The parent is saying “Do it like I do” and from the child’s vantage point, they see the back of a hand vaguely moving. Many higher executive-functioning “neurotypical” kids may complain “I can’t see anything!” but many of our OT kids will just know that they never seem to understand when someone shows them “do it like I did”. 
The kid doesn’t know what they don’t know, and since we aren’t mind readers, we often don’t realize the basic issue a child is missing, and assume it’s something graver.  
Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: 1

6 Nov 2013

Because what if the IEP team gets hit by a bus?

I just burst out laughing. The IEP team got a long e-mail from a parent asking us for clarifications in a variety of places, which can be overwhelming of course, especially right before bedtime (coughsleephygienecoughypocriticalOTcough).

Anyways, the mother specifies an area she wants clarified and then writes We all know what this is referring to but just in case the entire IEP team gets hit by a bus.”

I freaking burst out laughing. Often a parent or a IEP team member will request clarification just in case the family moves to a different district or service provider, so that there is not ambiguity. But I’ve never heard it spun as “In case you all die at once”. AHAHAHAHAHAHA
I wrote back to the IEP team (including mom who has a great sense of humor) and pointed out the awesomeness. Makes tackling a long list a lot more fun. 🙂
Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: none

5 Nov 2013

Goals Gone Wild: OT goal from the Rural South….

I know I’ve shared this before but I just stumbled across it on my old Tweets and had to laugh.

From when I was an OT in rural Georgia, my first year 🙂
This man was asked his long-term goals for OT and he said “To be able to flip a bird, scratch my butt, and slap my wife.”
AHAHAHAHHAHAHA gotta love the rural deep south….he was a hoot. (Definitely joking, I promise, on the wife part!!)
I switched from posting on Twitter as Funkist to posting as MsAwesomenessOT….MissAwesomeness was taken and MissAwesomenessOT is too long.
I also have my pinterest still at www.pinterest.com/funkist/ot-ideas 🙂
Soon I am launching missawesomeness.com with a new look and hoping to get on top of getting out my children’s book once I get my illustrator lined up!
KD
Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: none

1 Nov 2013

You know how Google+ has circles?

I run around high circles, baby. Or whatever that expression is. You get my point. Not Google+ circles though, that was just my poor analogy. Moving on. 
I did a google image search for occupational therapy for several reasons, including curiosity, and so I am glad I am not a cat for I would have already used ten thousand lives. 
On the very first (very long) page of images, there are multiple people I know in person, which statistically seems unlikely.  One is a picture from St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital showing two of the staff member OTs that were there when I was volunteering. The second is a picture of Karis, one of my best friend PT’s sister (who is an OT), working in a rehab hospital in Chattanooga, and the third is a picture I took of Allison and Emily, two of my classmates, in a supermarket. One of them is leading another, who is blind-folded, to simulate navigating the market as a person with blindness (notice that person first language there). 
Considering like 27 million hits come up when you search for OT, I assume image wise its similar, so YAY I know people in high places, I need their autographs. 

https://www.google.com/search?q=occupational+therapy&rlz=1C5CHFA_enUS503US503&espv=210&es_sm=119&source=lnms&tbm=isch&sa=X&ei=_At0UvX5B6TTiwKCyIH4DA&ved=0CAkQ_AUoAQ&biw=840&bih=449#es_sm=119&espv=210&pws=0&q=occupational+therapy&tbm=isch

Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: none

22 Oct 2013

The Journal of an OT Shadow Part 1

I’m copying the journal entries first and then explaining them in more detail down below. Journal entries from my current OT shadow who just started 🙂 Yes, I’m apparently a goddess….but I felt that way about my OTs when I first started shadowing too, fifty million years ago. 🙂 No editing except to change names and add line breaks.

October X 2013

SHADOW JOURNAL ENTRY 1

Today was my first day working with Karen, the OT for XYZ School District

I have never felt so excited about a life changing decision in my entire life. I am absolutely obsessed with OT and after working with the children and watching Karen impact their day I am positive this is the career path I am meant to be in. 

She tells the children it is her job to make peoples lives easier and it was then that I realized how impacted these children’s lives are by their disabilities and how important the job of an OT actually is. She has the children start the session with a task they often have to complete in class such as opening their binder, or stacking papers in order. 

I was astonished at how long it took for them and felt so much compassion for these children. I can’t imagine how frustrating it must be for them to keep up and learn in school when they have trouble completing a small task. Karen broke down the task in such small easy to understand steps that I would have never thought of before. Sometimes when she had a child do something like turn on the light I was confused and didn’t realize she was actually checking to see how they were paying attention or following directions. 

I came to the realization that helping these children help themselves with small tasks would allow them to pay attention and follow directions better in the classroom setting so they could keep up with their classmates.

 

I love the focus OT has on anxiety and self esteem. I was a very slow learner and never thought that I was smart in school. I was so moved the way Karen spoke to one little boy and made him look her in the eyes and tell her that he was smart. These children probably feel inadequate in school, and you could just see the way she had made him feel smart and special when he left.

 

****

NOTES BY KAREN: Shadow will learn that everyone has a different idea of priority and focus once she starts to see more therapists in action….I definitely do a lot of my approach via increasing self-esteem and decreasing anxiety. She also learned in her first few days that while it seemed at times I was being off-task/”slow”/inefficient/asking them to do odd things/not providing them with important items, I was actually 95% of the time doing it for the benefit of the kids…forcing them to ask for what they need, find what they need, follow basic directions and sequencing, do heavy work as they walk in the door to “set up”, give them some information or part of the task but not enough to finish it without some basic problem solving or requesting assistance, etc….simulating the kind of things that happen in a classroom setting. 

For example I might give them part of a task or task instructions without necessary supplies, then turn away and start “being busy” with something else for a minute to see what they do….if nothing happens, I turn around and cue as minimally as possible and act surprised….ie….why haven’t you started? “Because we don’t have pencils” and take it from there). After a few times of this being done dramatically they catch on, typically. Shadow wanted to help, ie popping up to get the pencils, and I had to let her know after a few minutes that unless I cued her “Miss Shadow, can you…” that I was being slow to force the kids to initiate and problem-solve. It’s one of those things that have to be explained because of course it makes sense to pop up and get pencils for kids who don’t have them when it seems like I just forgot. I would have done the same thing. And sometimes I do cue her to do it because I legitimately forgot! But usually….intentional mistakes. 🙂 

**************

October Y 2013

SHADOW JOURNAL ENTRY 2

I was working with a child JaneDoe on her math homework and was totally caught off guard by something Karen had shown her. She showed JaneDoe how to eliminate answers on a multiple- choice test without completing the problem first. I thought this was odd and that JaneDoe would cheat rather than finish the problem and I didn’t think it was a good idea. I later learned that JaneDoe often freaks out on tests and that she has very low self -esteem when it comes to test taking and Karen was trying to empower her and give her some confidence in herself during the test. 

I would have never thought of this, and was amazed at the small way Karen was able to help her have confidence during the test.  I also did not understand that JaneDoe bombs the tests and does not have time to finish. This showed me how OT really looks at the big picture and helps people deal with real problems rather than on the small scale how to get an answer correct, but how to complete a test overall and how to take all test efficiently and fix a larger scale problem rather than division skills.

*****(NOTES BY KAREN: Yes, I was working on test strategies rather than answers, including how to approach a multiple choice test and eliminate obviously wrong answers  – many of our kids KNOW the material but freeze up on tests due to stress/insecurity as well as not knowing how to approach a test. I do this from the OT angle though, of strategies, problem solving, slant boards/masking, visual clutter reduction, sequencing, etc etc) I want to write a whole blog post on this soon but for now…..yes, it was about having a child approach the test with confidence that they can get through it in the fastest and easiest way possible, that since they know the material they can do well on a multiple choice test because it’s a game, and that the answers are always right there.

It’s not about whether the child can do every single question correctly, it’s about whether the child feels confidence in their ability based on new OT-based skills, and can do better on the test, for example, if they have a 50% chance of right answer versus 25% by eliminating an answer or two without even having to do the full problem. Etc etc. Many times “strategy” starts with a feeling of confidence and empowerment and then it goes from there with foundational skills related to OT….and of course the academic ones, but I’m focusing on my part! 

They have to have foundational set-up skills to be able to do the academics efficiently/correctly/securely! Oh and yes, our children typically have IEP accommodations to allow for extra time….but extra time doesn’t mean much if the child becomes discouraged or easily fatigues and just gives up after a while!) 

==========================================

Alright now for the chat about having a long-term OT shadow! I’m just naming her “Shadow” for the purpose of this blog but I don’t mean it in a rude/degrading way. I love her and it’s just an easy describing name! 

My shadows have been prospective OT student, both long-term. I’ve had great experiences so far (although this is only my second, and we interview carefully first!!). The initial set-up for them both in a district sense and an OT sense is challenging at first in terms of adminstration/hoops to jump through, but can be totally worth it. However, before a bunch of OTs get bombarded by hopeful shadows – every district/company is different, every OT is different in what they want or can handle, different legalities/policies….

Luckily my current shadow like
s to write and I’ve asked her to do some journaling for both herself and possibly for the blog. I just replace names out. 

I really encouraged her to not censor anything or not worry about relevance, etc, but so far I don’t think she believes me since this is like the nicest fan letter ever, ahahahaaha. 

She doesn’t know me well yet but I will continue to encourage her to be “real” – since I feel pretty certain she won’t be so flattering at all times….she’s in the honeymoon stage. 😉 She wants to organize the notes for me and I keep telling her not to do a thing unless its for HERSELF – I like transparency, and the messiness of learning, not the re-assembled learning after we go back and fix things with new knowledge. I like for people to see the WHAT?!!!! and the pre-fixing…the learning out loud, not the “learning out later”…actually I like both together, first out loud, then out later….nice to see the process.

Whoops I’m rambling again. My shadow is doing a great job and trying hard to meet my needs, I’m going to have to keep pushing her to include that my needs include not meeting my needs, ahahahaaha, meaning sharing the messy and scattered and unknown and MEAN things like “what the hell is she doing?” even if she figures it out later that it wasn’t as weird as it looked. ahahaha

So while her journal entries above are a way too glowing testimony (although when I look back at me as a prospective OT student I thought my OTs were gods for a long time), I do want you guys to see what it looks like when you are new and trying to figure stuff out.

There are a few pieces that aren’t 100% accurate in terms of IEP process but she is writing it based on only a few days of knowledge – so feel free to comment on whatever, but realize it’s a perspective that doesn’t have a whole or fully accurate picture yet, so please don’t assume something isn’t happening based on a statement…

——–

In conclusion – I’m hoping to continue to share what Shadow is willing to share about the learning out loud process of figuring out what OT is even when it doesn’t make sense at first (or ever, haha), but also encouraging her to get that it is TOTALLY okay if it’s not this glowing, nicely organized piece…maybe next time it will be all over the place, that would make me even happier…;) ) 

Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: 1

22 Oct 2013

Man with amputated leg has awesome Halloween costumes

http://i.imgur.com/owOvGcU.jpg

This guy definitely fulfills our OT ideal of living life to its fullest. Love the creativity of his costumes incorporating – yet not – his amputated leg! 

Category: Occupational Therapy | Comments: none