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TEACHER SAYS; PICKLE PATH TO PROGRESS
EVELYN PORRECA VUKO SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON
POST Monday, November 27, 2000 ; Page C04
Max fell out of his seat 37 times last week. He blames it on the
chair. The excuse he gave for the fight in his sixth-grade math
class was that somebody breathed on him too hard. When the school
bus brakes screeched in his ears, he punched a hole in his seat the
size of a grapefruit.
It could be crossed sensory circuits making Max cross.
Teacher Says: Have a pickle. Use sensory tools for calming and
increasing his productivity and self-esteem. This means, however,
trying a thing or two that would have driven old Mrs. Siddupstrait
to early retirement or you to the corner to write 100 times you'd
never do it again.
Kids like Max "can't depend on their bodies to give them correct
information and that can make furniture and even people unsafe,"
says Diana A. Henry, a Phoenix-based occupational therapist
specializing in sensory integration. If Max's senses can't receive,
modulate, integrate and organize input, he lands on the floor, then
goes through the roof.
Sensory integration dysfunction can exist alone or be "a part of
other diagnoses like attention deficit hyperactivity disorder
(ADHD), Tourette's Syndrome or autism," says Henry. But, she adds,
"It isn't only special-needs kids who can't sit still, can't follow
directions, can't keep their hands to themselves, don't do their
work and don't pay attention. Sensory integration benefits all
children."
And even adults. "No one is too old for it. Neuroplasticity,
changes in the way the brain receives and interprets information,
continues until we die," says Henry, who travels cross-country with
her husband in a fifth-wheel home called "ATEACHABOUT" conducting
workshops for students, teachers, administrators, parents and
therapists. Her "Tool Chests" offer over-the-counter sensory
integration exercises, games and activities that can be tailored to
fit a kid's specific needs.
She advises teachers and parents to "be a detective, watch their
behavior. It tells you exactly what they need." You get an edge with
kids Max's age. "The 11-to-13-year-olds can verbalize and tell you
what their behavior is all about," she says. "Then, tell them they
aren't clumsy, bad, dumb or lazy, and that they are not alone."
But what about that pickle? Some kids find sensory comfort and
support in foods with a sour taste. "Big, sour pickles are great
sensory tools," says Henry, who is quick to tell students, however,
that "these are not rewards. They are tools to make your bodies work
better."
Though the following ideas would shoot Mrs. Siddupstrait straight
out of her sensible shoes, they might comfort, activate or calm
Max's senses and derail any mounting frustration:
* Eat food in class. Find out what will help Max take the bite
out of sixth grade. "Mouth tools provide oral stimulation that
improves focus," says Henry. Any adult who has ever chewed a pencil,
sipped tea or munched endless bags of dried papaya while working
knows that "mouth tools" also relieve tension. Foods that are
crunchy, chewy, salty, sweet, sour or spicy, or ones that can be
sucked, bitten, pulled or licked provide good sensory feedback.
Henry suggests popcorn, pretzels, string licorice, water bottles or
carrots, "but beware of allergies," she adds.
* Stand up and wiggle around. Shaking and moving around will help
Max "tune in, be ready to work and get those wiggles out," says
Henry. Make learning syntax a moving experience for Max and his
classmates or cousins. On a chalkboard or wall, post sentence parts
in varying order: subject, predicate, direct object, indirect
object, prepositional phrases. Then print nouns, verbs, objects and
phrases on cards. Starting with a subject, Max and his buddies
position themselves under the sentence part that their word matches.
Once the sentence is properly formed, have them "activate" a
sentence like: The waddling bird gave a wiggling fish to the
trembling turkey on the table.
* Switch seats. "The brain forms maps not only on the basis of
the scenery, but also from the body's relationship to the scenery,"
says Eric Jensen, author of "Teaching With the Brain in Mind" (ASCD,
$21.95 at www.ascd.org). Build mind maps in spectators, too. Before
each new sentence in the activity above, have groups switch from
chairs to the floor to the top of their desks or across the
windowsill. At home, cousins can move from chairs to a tabletop to
perching along the arms of the sofa. To keep chaos to a minimum,
intersperse sentences with having the whole group do "a slow
stretch, long inhale and slow exhale," says Jensen.
* Jump up and down in your seat. If Max is in pre-school or the
early grades, try the following exercise to take the edge off of his
anger. Have kids pretend they are popcorn cooking in a popper. "This
is a quick way to get going and then calm down," says Henry. Sitting
on a chair, Max uses his hands and feet to push his body up and
down. Use hand signals to direct him through the "cooking" process.
Chair push-ups also strengthen little hands and arms for the hard
work of handwriting. Add a mouth tool by sharing a popcorn snack.
* Send hand signals across the room. "Slow, rocking, rhythmic,
repetitive movements are relaxing," says Henry. Borrow the classic
military semaphore flag signaling system for calming, focusing and
increasing visual skills. Letters and numbers are signaled across
the classroom or the back yard using color and wide arm movements.
"Make sure kids cross their hands across the midline of their body
because it integrates both sides of the body," says Henry. Instead
of the standard red and yellow flags, Max can wear two different
colored gloves. "Heavy lifting is calming," says Henry, so have him
use small hand weights when signaling. Max can take a spelling test,
practice Spanish vocabulary or do math equations as spectators perch
in ever-changing spots all around him. Find the semaphore alphabet
at www.anbg.gov.au/flags/semaphore.html
Though some might dispute the theories of sensory integration,
there will be days when nothing works better or faster than a pickle
to dill-iver Max an upbeat groove. Simple sensory tools work because
they appeal to the toddler in all of us--the cantankerous crybaby
who could always be calmed by presenting us with two chocolate chip
cookies, one for each hot little hand.
Diana Henry speaks tonight, 7:30, at St. Columba's Church, 4201
Albemarle St. NW; details, 301-652-2263. $15 admission. "Tool
Chests" available at henryot.com
Contact Evelyn Vuko at evuko@teachersays.com, or at
The Washington Post, Style Plus, 1150 15th St. NW, Washington, D.C.
20071.
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