首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Camp with Valuable Therapy for Kids with Special Needs Matthew Hoffman will spend much of his summer doing handwriting exerc
Camp with Valuable Therapy for Kids with Special Needs Matthew Hoffman will spend much of his summer doing handwriting exerc
admin
2012-07-11
93
问题
Camp with Valuable Therapy for Kids with Special Needs
Matthew Hoffman will spend much of his summer doing handwriting exercises set to music,practicing conversation techniques with other kids on the soccer field and improving his motor planning by learning to ride a bike. In other words,the 6-year-old from Bethesda is going to camp. Matthew has autism (孤独症). So his five weeks at Basic Concepts in Rockville, which began on June 28, will be different from the typical summer day camp in the Washington area.
Few counselors at Basic Concepts are home from college for the summer. The staff members are trained specialists in speech and occupational therapy as well as special education teachers and play therapists. And there are lots of them: one therapist for every two or three children. Equipment goes far beyond what you usually find at the playground, including weighted vests, trampolines (蹦床) and swings commonly used in therapy sessions. " I love that he can go to a summer camp like every other kid," said Matthew’s mother,Ali Hoffman.
Basic Concepts, a private therapy center offering speech and language services and other help for children with mild learning differences,began a therapeutic camp a decade ago with 10 children. "This year, it is at capacity of 90 students and had to turn families away because of a lack of space," said Katy Whidden, a speech and language pathologist at the center.
Across the Washington region, enrollment in therapeutic camps soars every year, although they are far more expensive than traditional day camp. Camp Friendship,which is run by Tots to Teens,a speech therapy practice in Woodbridge, drew kids from five counties last year for its program in Stafford County. This year,it is adding a session in Prince William County to meet the demand.
Lynne Israel, director of Lynne C. Israel and Associates in the District, an occupational therapy group, said she has been able to fill as many as 70 slots at her summer camp in recent years, with requests for more.
Complicated Issues
Most campers have a combination of delays and diagnoses that can include autism spectrum disorders and learning disabilities as well as sensory processing problems, defined by difficulty handling certain sounds, sights, smells, textures and other environmental stimuli. These children struggle with reading, writing, cutting and sustaining conversations with other kids. Loud noises, bright lights or unfamiliar tastes or textures can disrupt or disorganize them.
Therapeutic camps, with small-group activities and individual plans for each camper, are often modeled after the weekly therapy sessions and classroom help that many of the children receive during the school year. The goals are the same-.to improve their academic and social skills and help them better function in what often seems like an overwhelming world.
So cooking,for example,becomes a way to expand vocabulary and teach campers how to work together. Science experiments force children to get their hands dirty and get accustomed to new textures. Arts and crafts projects double as intense practice of fine motor skills.
" They give them therapy where they don’t even know they’re getting it," said Holly Jankowski of Germantown. Her daughter Apryl,6,has pervasive developmental disorder,an autism spectrum disorder, and is in her third summer at Basic Concepts.
Thick pudding, chewy gummy bears and hard candy used to make Apryl turn her chair around away from the table. But at Basic Concepts,she has taken small steps to improve her diet: She must bring a snack to her lips,politely kiss it and put it back down on the plate before refusing it. "It’s a new strategy that they tried,and now we do that at home," her mother said.
Across the United States,as more children are found to have special needs,their parents are seeking help to hone such skills as handwriting and playground manners.
Susan Feeley is director of admissions at the Lab School in the District, a private school for students with learning disabilities, which also runs a summer camp. She attributes the growing demand, in part, to an increase in early diagnosis of children with learning differences and parents’ understanding that early intervention can make a tremendous difference in a child’s long-term success.
" Especially with younger children, the earlier you get remediation and therapy in place, while you can’t change the blueprint of who the child is,you can really help the child develop quicker and develop coping mechanisms," Feeley said.
Allison Mistrett, an occupational therapist at Leaps and Bounds in the District, which offers a six-week camp for pre-schoolers, thinks that more heavy academic demands for kindergartners are partly responsible for the increased interest. For children with learning delays,the standards at school are even more challenging. " One of the things we hear more and more is that now kindergarten is what used to be first grade," Mistrett said. " I attribute a lot of it to the demands schools place on kids. "
The downside of these camps is the price. The average day camp costs $ 100 to $ 275 per week, according to the American Camp Association. But a special-needs camp, with a different program for nearly every child, small therapist-to-student ratios and lots of expensive gym equipment, costs much more.
Camp Friendship is $ 500 for a week of half-day sessions. The Lab School’s five-week program ranges from $ 1,275 to $ 2,735, depending on the activities. The six-week camp at Leaps and Bounds is $ 2,400.
But many parents are willing to pay. They consider summer a time for intense work on skills and an opportunity to help close the gap between their children and typically developing peers. " Everything in the special-needs community is expensive, so I feel almost immune to it at this point," Hoffman said. Matthew would " get lost at a typical camp. This is really the best opportunity for him to have a camp experience but get extra help. So for me,it’s totally worth it. "
Huge Social Step
Jodie Steiner said she’s hopeful that her son Gabriel Mini,7,will get some help making friends during hi$ three weeks of camp at the Treatment and Learning Centers in Rockville. Gabriel has autism. " He really,really wants to be social. He likes to be part of a group,but he gets there and freaks out,"said Steiner, of Takoma Park. "If he can get there and not be intimidated,that would be a huge step for him. "
At Camp Friendship, one of the cooking activities will be making popcorn, to go with the camp’s circus theme. "Campers will watch the kernels pop and then talk to one another about it. Or, as the therapists see it,the activity will teach vocabulary and social language" ,said Jennifer Ruckner, a speech and language pathologist at Tots to Teens Therapy, which runs Camp Friendship.
"They’re able to use very typical activities and learn how to play,how to use their language,how to socially use those skills to work simultaneously beside somebody,and an adult doesn’t have to be there to prompt it all of the time,"Ruckner said. "That’s what makes it different from going to a day camp. "
Susan Feeley holds the idea that the growing camp demand is partly due to______.
选项
A、the increase of children with learning problems
B、the parents’ understanding of early intervention
C、the change on the blueprint of who the child is
D、the fast development of the younger children
答案
B
解析
定位句提及,Susan Feeley把治疗型夏令营的火爆归因于日益增加的对有学习问题的孩子的及早诊断和父母对早期干预的理解,由此可推知B)与之相符,故为答案。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/siE7777K
0
大学英语六级
相关试题推荐
A、Lessthan30minutes.B、From30to45minutes.C、Atleast45minutes.D、Morethan30minutes.B
Accordingtoamuch-reportedsurveycarriedoutin2002,Britainthenhad4.3millionclosed-circuittelevisioncameras(CCTV)--
Accordingtoamuch-reportedsurveycarriedoutin2002,Britainthenhad4.3millionclosed-circuittelevisioncameras(CCTV)--
PartⅡReadingComprehension(SkimmingandScanning)Directions:Inthispart,youwillhave15minutestogooverthepassageq
A、Itcombinesdifferentfeelingstogether.B、Itcanexpresssomeveryconfusingfeelings.C、Itexaggeratessomespecialfeelings
A、Hewillnotcontinuewiththeexperimenttoday.B、Hewillworkontheexperimentwithoutthewoman.C、Hedoesnotknowwhenth
It’sFridaynight,andyouwanttowatchamovieathomewiththatspecialsomeone.Youcouldgotoavideostoreandrentafil
Autism(儿童自闭症)isaseriousmentalillness,especiallyofchildren,inwhichonebecomesunabletocommunicateorformrelation
Autism(儿童自闭症)isaseriousmentalillness,especiallyofchildren,inwhichonebecomesunabletocommunicateorformrelation
随机试题
(2018年枣庄市中区)1980年,江西省奉新县边远山村教师奇缺。时年只有十九岁的南昌市进贤县姑娘支月英不顾家人反对,远离家乡,只身来到离家两百多公里、离乡镇45公里、海拔近千米且道路不通的泥洋小学,成了一名深山女教师。一到白洋教学点,她发现这里条件比想
夏季,羽绒服通过打折等促销措施而出现了淡季热销的局面。可见,厂商认识到羽绒服的需求属于()
A.浮脉B.濡脉C.芤脉D.沉脉E.弱脉
动机产生的两个条件是
引起婴幼儿缺铁性贫血的最主要原因是
某项目,需要采购价值280万元的设备,该采购项目属于政府采购项目,招标代理机构向业主提出可以采用公开招标或竞争性谈判进行采购。业主选择了采用竞争性谈判方式进行采购。业主选择的竞争性谈判方式是否合理?说明理由。
行政责任是与行政权力相对应的一个范畴,下列关于普通的行政责任的内容表述中不符合规定的是()。
下列哪些选项是在城市总体规划修编中关于人口规模专题研究的工作?
甲企业与丙企业签订一份技术开发合同,记载金额共计500万元,其中研究开发费用为100万元。该合同甲、乙各持一份,共应缴纳的印花税为()元。
需求分析阶段的任务是确定______。
最新回复
(
0
)