Why is my child spinning or watching Wheel
of Fortune? by Valerie Dejean
Analyzing the sensory patterns that a child with
Autism/PDD presents with will help us unravel the mysteries of
certain behaviors that may otherwise seem abnormal. When we begin to
understand that the child is trying to meet a developmental need or may
perceive the world in such a radically different manner than we do,
then we see that this behavior ist he only thing that makes sense to
him.
For example a child that constantly spins himself or
objects, may be a child with a severely under-reactive vestibular
system, that he is trying to stimulate. We normally get this
stimulation through movement. However this child may not
receive this normal stimulation adequately through his disordered
system, and thus tries to make up for it through intensive movement
(spinning). His vestibular system may be so underreactive, that he
tries to get this stimulation optic-kinetically through his visual
system (spinning objects). Looking at the behavior in this light,
rather than trying to extinguish it, we might try to find way to more
appropriately provide the child the stimulation he seeks. (For example
a swing on a spinner, while batting at dangling objects.) It sounds
simple but often a technique like this (meeting the sensory needs of
the child) will extinguish a behavior much faster than stopping the
behavior forcibly. A child's innate need is often the best lead to
follow in treatment. Just because there is abnormality doesn't mean
that the child's instincts are wrong.
| Understanding the particular sensory
sensitivities of a
child will help us engage a child with a diagnosis that includes severe
relationship problem as its main symptoms. If a child with Autism/PDD
is over-reactive to light and sound, a whisper may get his attention.
If they are under-reactive, an animated voice with exaggerated facial
expressions is what will work.
Difficulties
in motor planning, known as dyspraxia (or apraxia) is common in
children with Autism/PDD, though it is infrequently recognized. Motor
planning or praxis is the ability of the brain to conceive, organize,
and carry out a sequence of unfamiliar actions. In dyspraxic syndrome
there is a reduced ability to carry out non-learned movements, even
though there is adequate motor and conceptual capacity to do so. Praxis
is believed to be a single function involving three basic processes:
ideation or generating an idea of how one might interact with the
environment; motor planning or organizing a program of action; and
execution or the actual performance of a motor act.
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Difficulties in motor planning are often the
explanation for the increase in frustration the child experiences in
the second year. According to Piaget, the child moves from the
sensory-motor period (which they haven't mastered adequately) to the
operational period at this time. Rather than just experience the world,
the child is called upon to master it. Toys become more complex
requiring more complex and sequenced motor behavior which they cannot
organize. Language also becomes more complex, requiring more complex
and sequenced oral motor movements. Motor planning problems affect a
child's ability to learn through imitation. They cannot learn through
gestural demonstration and much of early childhood learning is done in
this manner. Children with motor planning disorders may be able to
generate their own plan but cannot follow someone else's. They may seem
uncooperative as they cannot perform on demand, (usually for an
examiner), tasks their families have seen them do on other occasions.
Integration of sensory information (which sound
stimulation can profoundly influence) gives our brain the capacity to
learn. It gives us the ability to put it all together, the foundation
necessary for more abstract concepts.This integration allows us to
perceive red, round, hard, and then develop the concept of apple. This
gives the foundation to recognize a picture of an apple. We can then
latter recognize and connect the symbols A P P L E to mean apple. We
can later become even more abstract and understand the expression "you
are the apple of my eye."
Many children with Autism/PDD cannot make
the
symbolic leap to abstraction. |
"They are
trapped in a lower level of
development. They can spin the wheels on a car yet they cannot pretend
to make the car go down the road. This blocks their ability to develop
normal cognitive and linguistic structures such as make the car go
fast/slow, over/under etc. Their ability to perform may have no
proportional relationship with their cognitive level which often is
quite intelligent. Again this is a cause for significant frustration
and low self esteem."
(Our solution: This is
treatable if the practitioner
has some sort of method for reorganizing the child's nervous and
vestibular system, with an eye to improving motor planning. Valerie
Dejean combines the original Tomatis Method with Vestibular
Re-Integration to get your child to look you in
the eye.)
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They are trapped in a
lower level of
development. They can spin the wheels on a car yet they cannot pretend
to make the car go down the road. This blocks their ability to develop
normal cognitive and linguistic structures such as make the car go
fast/slow, over/under etc. Their ability to perform may have no
proportional relationship with their cognitive level which often is
quite intelligent. Again this is a cause for significant frustration
and low self esteem.
(Our solution: This is treatable if the
practitioner
has some sort of method for reorganizing the child's nervous and
vestibular system, with an eye to improving motor planning. Valerie
Dejean combines the original Tomatis Method with Vestibular
Re-Integration to get your child to look you in the eye.)
(Valerie Dejean)
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