Greetings! What’s Lost as Handwriting Fades, August News
August Thoroughfare
Greetings!

August has arrived; the Aussie winter is nearing its end and the days are slowly getting warmer.

Thank you for everyone who attended our Praxis Workshops with Teresa A. May Benson! It was a huge success and Teresa was very happy with how everything turned out!

And with that our Handwriting Without Tears conference is getting ever so closer. With just over one month to go, the Early Bird Rate and 15% group discount (5+ participants) will cease on the 11th of August. Be sure not to miss out on this great course and with our returning dynamic international presenter Christina Bretz, OTR/L. Christina has extensive pediatric experience providing services to children in school settings, early intervention, home health care and private tutoring.

For those of you utilising the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) or going to be using the NDIS, Sensory Tools are NDIS approved.
Please be advised that NDIS are still having difficulties as you may be aware, and there are difficulties processing purchases. You may also be interested that, from what we have been advised, adding 'Improved Daily Living Skills' to your support cluster, 'Training for carers/parents' and 'Transdisciplinary Early Childhood Intervention' you may be able to claim our conferences under these.
We are still working with NDIS to gather more information, so please hang tight and when we know more information, you will be the first to know!

A couple of new products this month to add to our list!

You may have seen The In Sync Activity Card Book authors Carol Kranowitz and Joye Newman, which is a huge hit since hitting the shelves. Winner of the Mom's Choice Gold Award, these great cards are divided into beginner, intermediate, and advanced activities. Each activity tells you why and how it works, what you need for it, and ways to make it more challenging. It also tells you what to look for, to make sure your child is getting the most out of the activity.

The Loving Push by Temple Grandin, Ph.D. and Debra Moore, Ph.D. Parents, teachers, therapists, and anyone who cares about a child or teen on the autism spectrum need this essential road map to prepare our youth for being successful adults in today’s world. Spell out what steps you can take to restore your child’s hope and motivation, and what you must avoid. Eight life stories told by people on the autism spectrum, including chapters on subjects like how to get kids off their computers, how to build on their strengths and get back to caring about their lives, and how to find a path to a successful, meaningful life

Check out our new Balloon Ball Animals which encourage deep exhalation. Blowing air into a balloon gives your intercostal muscles a quick aerobic workout. The intercostal muscles (for those of you who don’t know) spread and elevate the diaphragm and the rib cage as well. Take a deep breath and this simple exercise fills the lungs with oxygen, when you exhale you dispel carbon dioxide from your body. Keep blowing up a number of balloons and you really give your lungs a workout.

Also we have quite a lot of Soft Play ready to go! And our newest addition is our 23 piece set ! Create design and play with this lot, let yours and their imagination run wild.

Does handwriting matter?

Not very much, according to many educators. The Common Core standards, which have been adopted in most states, call for teaching legible writing, but only in kindergarten and first grade. After that, the emphasis quickly shifts to proficiency on the keyboard.

But psychologists and neuroscientists say it is far too soon to declare handwriting a relic of the past. New evidence suggests that the links between handwriting and broader educational development run deep.

Children not only learn to read more quickly when they first learn to write by hand, but they also remain better able to generate ideas and retain information. In other words, it’s not just what we write that matters — but how.

“When we write, a unique neural circuit is automatically activated,” said Stanislas Dehaene, a psychologist at the Collège de France in Paris. “There is a core recognition of the gesture in the written word, a sort of recognition by mental simulation in your brain.

“And it seems that this circuit is contributing in unique ways we didn’t realize,” he continued. “Learning is made easier.”

A 2012 study led by Karin James, a psychologist at Indiana University, lent support to that view. Children who had not yet learned to read and write were presented with a letter or a shape on an index card and asked to reproduce it in one of three ways: trace the image on a page with a dotted outline, draw it on a blank white sheet, or type it on a computer. They were then placed in a brain scanner and shown the image again.

The researchers found that the initial duplication process mattered a great deal. When children had drawn a letter freehand, they exhibited increased activity in three areas of the brain that are activated in adults when they read and write: the left fusiform gyrus, the inferior frontal gyrus and the posterior parietal cortex.

By contrast, children who typed or traced the letter or shape showed no such effect. The activation was significantly weaker.

Dr. James attributes the differences to the messiness inherent in free-form handwriting: Not only must we first plan and execute the action in a way that is not required when we have a traceable outline, but we are also likely to produce a result that is highly variable.

That variability may itself be a learning tool. “When a kid produces a messy letter,” Dr. James said, “that might help him learn it.”

Our brain must understand that each possible iteration of, say, an “a” is the same, no matter how we see it written. Being able to decipher the messiness of each “a” may be more helpful in establishing that eventual representation than seeing the same result repeatedly.

“This is one of the first demonstrations of the brain being changed because of that practice,” Dr. James said.

In another study, Dr. James is comparing children who physically form letters with those who only watch others doing it. Her observations suggest that it is only the actual effort that engages the brain’s motor pathways and delivers the learning benefits of handwriting.

The effect goes well beyond letter recognition. In a study that followed children in grades two through five, Virginia Berninger, a psychologist at the University of Washington, demonstrated that printing, cursive writing, and typing on a keyboard are all associated with distinct and separate brain patterns — and each results in a distinct end product. When the children composed text by hand, they not only consistently produced more words more quickly than they did on a keyboard, but expressed more ideas. And brain imaging in the oldest subjects suggested that the connection between writing and idea generation went even further. When these children were asked to come up with ideas for a composition, the ones with better handwriting exhibited greater neural activation in areas associated with working memory — and increased overall activation in the reading and writing networks.

It now appears that there may even be a difference between printing and cursive writing — a distinction of particular importance as the teaching of cursive disappears in curriculum after curriculum. In dysgraphia, a condition where the ability to write is impaired, sometimes after brain injury, the deficit can take on a curious form: In some people, cursive writing remains relatively unimpaired, while in others, printing does.

In alexia, or impaired reading ability, some individuals who are unable to process print can still read cursive, and vice versa — suggesting that the two writing modes activate separate brain networks and engage more cognitive resources than would be the case with a single approach.

Dr. Berninger goes so far as to suggest that cursive writing may train self-control ability in a way that other modes of writing do not, and some researchers argue that it may even be a path to treating dyslexia. A 2012 review suggests that cursive may be particularly effective for individuals with developmental dysgraphia — motor-control difficulties in forming letters — and that it may aid in preventing the reversal and inversion of letters.

Cursive or not, the benefits of writing by hand extend beyond childhood. For adults, typing may be a fast and efficient alternative to longhand, but that very efficiency may diminish our ability to process new information. Not only do we learn letters better when we commit them to memory through writing, memory and learning ability in general may benefit.

Two psychologists, Pam A. Mueller of Princeton and Daniel M. Oppenheimer of the University of California, Los Angeles, have reported that in both laboratory settings and real-world classrooms, students learn better when they take notes by hand than when they type on a keyboard. Contrary to earlier studies attributing the difference to the distracting effects of computers, the new research suggests that writing by hand allows the student to process a lecture’s contents and reframe it — a process of reflection and manipulation that can lead to better understanding and memory encoding.

Not every expert is persuaded that the long-term benefits of handwriting are as significant as all that. Still, one such skeptic, the Yale psychologist Paul Bloom, says the new research is, at the very least, thought-provoking.

“With handwriting, the very act of putting it down forces you to focus on what’s important,” he said. He added, after pausing to consider, “Maybe it helps you think better.”

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A Before and After shot (below) of one of our participants children from a past HWT conference

The internationally acclaimed Handwriting Without Tears Workshops use a fun, multi sensory, hands-on approach to child development in handwriting.  It utilizes dynamic instruction in teaching methodology from preschool and writing readiness level up to writing and printing both uppercase and lowercase letters.

The HWT workshops provide powerful and practical ideas and materials for immediate use in the classroom or clinic setting.  Participants describe these two leading edge workshops as the most affordable, dynamic and informative professional development available.

Millions of students all over the world use Handwriting Without Tears.  This easy-to-teach, easy-to-learn curriculum makes handwriting mastery joyful for students and their Instructors, teachers, therapist, caregivers, parents.

Current research demonstrates that writing by hand improves creative writing skills and fine motor abilities.

Come along and learn  just how easy it is to help children get great results in school.  In fact elementary students have been found to write faster by hand than when keyboarding.

All participants will leave with simple, ready to use strategies for the child they support.

When choosing the full 2 day Conference you will receive over $500 worth of product for you to take home!

Look at what you get when you register just for Day 1!!
School Shadow Guidelines by Dr. Jed Baker, Alex Liau W. M. - Book Review - D.Bender
Your child may find it difficult to adapt to new surroundings and learning environments from time to time. School Shadow Guidelines helps guide your child to develop appropriate behaviors in school, establish an environment that helps to strengthen academic ability, and also build up on his/her social interaction skills with the goal of independence. Special needs children can benefit from having inclusive education to aid in their development and growth; this is where school shadowing serves vital roles.

"Teacher assistants/paraprofessionals do amazing work and yet they often receive very little guidance. This is a book that explains many behavior principles (the ABC's of analysis, reinforcement, behavioral management, fading, etc.) in extremely clear language with an emphasis on usefulness.

Dr. Baker gives guidance on token economies, visual calendars, visual schedules, social stories, and anger management. He tells how to prime students in order for them to be ready to face their challenges in the school day and he is very clear about what language to use and how to give clear instructions to students regarding their choices and what they should keep in mind, School districts should buy this book for all of their paraprofessionals!"

Check out Dr. Jed Bakers other works - No More Meltdowns
Traffic Jam In My Brain Online
Worldwide - October 2016
Now Mobile friendly for 2016
A fresh and innovative online seminar!

Genevieve Jereb's The Traffic Jam In My Brain is a Sensory Processing Approach to Challenges Associated with Autism, ADHD, Learning and Behavioural Differences, presented by international speaker Genevieve Jereb OTR.

Now you can view the workshop on your own schedule (broadband Internet connection required on a single computer), learning at your own pace how to help support children to “learn and thrive from the inside out.” Genevieve Jereb's dynamic, practical tools incorporate:

  • Regulation
  • Respiration
  • Rhythm
  • Relationship
  • Play and Movement

New for 2016: improved video quality, and MOBILE ACCESS. Start watching on your desktop, then continue on your mobile or tablet. (Note that mobile data rates may apply.) If you can watch a YouTube video, you can watch Genevieve Jereb's Traffic Jam In My Brain ONLINE.

This online experience comprises seven contact hours of Gen’s acclaimed methodology and will be available for the entire month of October (1st through 31st) 2016!

Check out Genevieve Jerebs' Albums!
"...no musical experience is necessary to use these toe-tapping, hand clapping songs which are well performed by Jereb and her musicians. These CDs saved the day this summer for our two children with autism on our lengthy road trip. The only requirement for using these CD’s is to press 'play' and have fun.” — Maureen Bennie
Sensory Tools | PO Box 692 Richmond NSW 2753 | admin@sensorytools.net | sensorytools.net
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