Children's Speech and OT

Children's Speech and OT We are a family centered children's speech and occupational therapy service with a highly skilled team. We work as a genuine multi-disciplinary team.

Children's therapy for occupational therapy and speech and language therapy

Interesting
07/07/2025

Interesting

Too often, people focus on the early reading piece of hyperlexia and that's it.

BUT...it's important to consider the WHOLE picture. And I use the word "whole" here intentionally (see gestalt processing below).

So, here are the key traits of hyperlexia, organized nicely into 6 main buckets or categories...

- Early reading ability: precocious, self-taught, appears quite early & often spontaneously (for many, even before they learn to talk!)

- Language differences: gestalt language processing (learn language in chunks vs. single words; rich intonation), echolalia, comprehension challenges, difficulty with expressive language, difficulty with WH questions, literal thinking

- Social differences: difficulty with social interactions and transitions, repetitive behaviors, strong preference for routines, rarely initiates conversations, intense focus on specific interests, preference for solitary or scripted play

- Intense interests: fascination with letters, numbers, logos, maps, or visual patterns, as well as a strong orientation towards written words

- Gestalt processing: scripted play, early interest in the entire alphabet, becomes upset when the whole is interrupted (e.g., a letter toy goes missing) 

- Strong memory: strong auditory & visual memory (especially for the written word, music, & movies)

==

Curious about hyperlexia? Comment RESOURCES to get started with our FREE Hyperlexia Handbook and quiz or to get personalized support.

[Image description: A white image with a circular yellow chart with 6 key traits of hyperlexia written on them. In the center of the circular chart is a clipart image in navy of a small child reading a book.]

23/02/2023

Sociologist Prof Jason Arday trained as a PE teacher before turning to academia.

Well explained. Thank you
05/02/2023

Well explained. Thank you

I’m a trauma therapist and I work with families of children who are not fine at school. The more stories I hear, the more I am concerned that this area is full of psychological techniques being applied in ways which, unfortunately, can make things worse rather than better.

It’s a basic tenet of trauma therapy that a traumatic event needs to be over before a person is ready to process and recover from what happened to them. They need to be safe. If they aren’t safe, then the first priority should be changing the circumstances to make sure they are safe. That’s because there is nothing wrong with a person feeling highly distressed when the situation that they are in is dangerous to them. It would be far more surprising (and concerning) if they were calm. Fiddling whilst Rome burns, we might say.

I use the metaphor of the burning house to explain this to people I work with. If your house is burning down, and you go running to tell someone, you’re going to be frightened and distressed. Maybe you shout at them ‘My house is burning down! Help me!’. If their response is to tell you to quieten down and concentrate on your breathing and that they’re sure it’s not that bad, you’ll get more upset and probably angry. You know your house is burning down! You need actual help, right now, not a breathing exercise! They aren’t listening to you! You really need them to know how bad it is and they don’t get it. You’ll shout louder, or maybe you’ll push past them to get to someone else who does understand. They might get angry with you then because they’ll say you’re being aggressive and ignoring them.

Your fear and distress as your house burns isn’t a sign of you having an emotional problem, it’s a sign that your survival system is acting as it should, to keep you safe. That’s what it’s there for. It gets triggered when we are in dangerous situations. Of course, it does also make mistakes sometimes – perhaps you’ve experienced a house fire in the past, and when the smoke alarm goes off in the house your survival system gets triggered even though it’s just the toaster. Then we might want to intervene to help you feel safe again.

With children, there’s a tendency to assume that their distress, particularly about school, is always an emotional mistake. The assumption is that they are feeling the way they do in error, like running out of the house when the smoke alarm goes off. This means that the solutions offered are calming strategies or anxiety management – or even being told not to be so silly, just join in and stop making a fuss. Adults do this with good intentions. We want to show them that the world isn’t as scary as they think it is. We don’t dislike the things they dislike, and so we think that if they understood the world as we do, they would be fine. To this end, we tell them that they are wrong to feel the way they do.

What this means is that when child is distressed about school, they are offered emotional regulation strategies. It’s assumed that the school is safe and the right place for them to be, and once they learn that, the better it will be for everyone. The solution to the problem (from this perspective) is for the child to stop feeling distressed about school, and then everyone will be happy.

But school isn’t always okay, and one person’s experience of a school isn’t the same as another. For some young people, their school feels like a hostile environment, day after day. They find things like the pressure and comparisons, the lack of privacy, the frequent transitions, the playground and the way that people talk to each other extremely difficult, and that doesn’t get better by doing it more. This doesn’t have to be true for everyone in the school to be true for some young people. One person’s happy place can be another person’s nightmare (look, some people climb very high buildings for fun!). Some young people feel unsafe and unhappy at school, but everyone is telling them that the problem is them and if they just did some more mindfulness or deep breathing, it would all be okay. This is really confusing for them.

For them, it’s like the house is burning down. They are highly distressed, they don’t feel safe, and being offered calming strategies feels like they aren’t being listened to. Not only will they not work, but they also have the potential to make things worse, because they tell the child that the problem is them.

That isn’t to say there isn’t a place for calming techniques - but it’s when the problems have been listened to, acknowledged and changes have been made. It’s when the fire has been put out. Now the house isn’t burning and the immediate danger is over, so we might be able to take some deep breaths and regroup. At that point, we might need to calm ourselves down so we are ready to rebuild. We might be ready to use the Thera-putty, or the breathing exercises, or a guided relaxation. But they won’t help put the fire out. For that, we need water and a fire engine.

Words: Dr Naomi Fisher
Illustration: Missing The Mark

https://naomicfisher.substack.com/

12/01/2023

what would you add to this list?

So helpful
12/01/2023

So helpful

11/01/2023

Chris Varney, Founder & CEO of the I CAN Network Ltd, reflects on the advocacy that his mother surrounded him with around his Autism diagnosis. We love this quote - it's a wonderful illustration that children truly can and do thrive when the adults in their lives approach their needs from a strengths-based perspective!

We're super excited to learn from Chris' insights at our rapidly approaching February conference, "Innovations in Autism Education: Neuroinclusive, neuroaffirming schooling."

Our conference is held entirely online so wherever you are in the world, you can join us. Will we see you there?

https://gems.eventsair.com/2023-reframing-autism/

11/01/2023

Hello everyone, we are back in clinic for 2023 and enjoying seeing everyone again.
I have some exciting new groups to announce for 2023. Each term our speech pathologists will run these 3 new groups.
1. Language and Play, for children attending four year old kinder in 2023, with any concerns around their play and language development.
2. Pre-literacy group, for children with a family history of learning difficulties/dyslexia, or if you are concerned around their lack of interest/ability all things getting ready to learn to read and write. For children attending four year old kinder of foundation year 2023.
3. Sounds Write group, for children struggling with learning to read, spell and write at school, in grades 1 and 2 in 2023.

If you are interested in these groups please contact our admin team, admin@cspeechot.com.au and they can send a detailed brochure. Groups will run each term, stopping for school holidays, fees can be private or NDIS funded. Limited numbers in each group. If you know anyone you think may be interested please share.

26/12/2022

Girls with autism often go undiagnosed because they don’t fit autism stereotypes and may mask symptoms better than boys do. Many more boys than girls are diagnosed on the autism spectrum: more than four boys for every autistic girl.

14/09/2022

Good advise

This is so true
14/09/2022

This is so true

Training and empowering parents to provide at-home interventions to children with autism spectrum disorder helps children improve in positive behaviors and language communication skills says a new study from BYU.

14/09/2022

Hiding your true self to fit in, to be accepted and to avoid prejudice.
Suppressing the behaviours natural to you, that help you to regulate.
Exhausting, draining, damaging.
The more the world understands and accepts autism, the more we can all be our true selves.

14/09/2022

Address

Melbourne, VIC

Opening Hours

Monday 8am - 5pm
Tuesday 8am - 5pm
Wednesday 8am - 5pm
Thursday 8am - 5pm
Friday 8am - 5pm

Telephone

+61474002044

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Children's Speech and OT posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Children's Speech and OT:

Share