Too cool for my fellow OT's out there!
The Intersections of therapy, technology with an emphasis on AAC, education and other random stuff..
Thursday, August 28, 2014
OT Problems, OT Rap about Occupational Therapy
Labels:
ADD,
ADHD,
Aspergar's Syndrome,
Autism,
cooking,
Education,
environment,
Learning Disability,
Modulation,
Occupational Therapy,
Social Skills,
spirit,
teaching,
visual processing
Monday, August 25, 2014
Increasingly Arne Duncan hears concerns about standardized testing...
Well, one more for the day... Guess I'm on fire Tek-ninjas!
Our fearless United States Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan writes a blog about education. It is often interesting, and mostly infuriating to me, as I don't see Mr. Duncan as a supporter of education, and so I am not a fan. Ironic, I know, given his office.
Recently he posted to his blog "A Back to School Conversation with Teachers and School Leaders. In this article he writes that:
"There are three main issues [he's] heard about repeatedly from educators:
- It doesn’t make sense to hold them accountable during this transition year for results on the new assessments – a test many of them have not seen before – and as many are coming up to speed with new standards.
- The standardized tests they have today focus too much on basic skills, not enough on critical thinking and deeper learning.
- Testing – and test preparation – takes up too much time."
If you've followed much of his work, this all is an about-face for him. It does not fit with what seems to be his agenda to support high-stakes testing, and (the real cynic in me thinks) dismantle public education.
But don't take my word for it, head over there, read it yourself, and leave him a comment.
I left a comment, and so far, the FBI has not visited me.
Happy testing!
When To Refer, When Not To Refer
My inspiration to write today came from an email from a friend, and fellow Occupational Therapist from a nearby state. She wrote:
In order to head off unnecessary referrals, we make a point to offer in-services to various staff groups (OT, SLP, PT, teachers) to really delineate what our respective roles are from our perspective.
For example, Occupational Therapists already have significant "Assistive Technology" as part of their domain. Consider adaptive eating utensils or cups, weighted vests, or pencil grips. An OT would never make a referral for such low-tech equipment, because they consider it a part of their domain. I posit that keyboarding software is a part of such equipment for most OT's. Similarly, many simple switches are part of a SLP's bailiwick as well.
Other teams may handle such situations differently, and I'd be curious to hear from folks.
Thanks for reading, and happy therapy!
"Our Assistive Tech team keeps getting overwhelmed with referrals for an AT Eval or Consultation....How do you divide up the roles in your county? Any process tips you'd recommend to cut back on needless referrals or to put back some effort into the teams making the referrals? I've heard staff say, "Let's make an AT referral" as soon as a parent asks the team if the student might do better with keyboarding. I feel like the OT or teacher could answer that question without involving an AT referral. Any thoughts?"We occasionally get referrals that don't require our expertise. When this happens, we follow up with a phone call to the referrer and try to get a bead on the situation. Are there questions that the team genuinely needs help with or are they simply looking for confirmation of their thinking. With newer staff, it is often an issue of sharing with them what our respective roles are. Occasionally, we may be faced with a potentially litigious situation, and so we are called in to be thorough.
In order to head off unnecessary referrals, we make a point to offer in-services to various staff groups (OT, SLP, PT, teachers) to really delineate what our respective roles are from our perspective.
For example, Occupational Therapists already have significant "Assistive Technology" as part of their domain. Consider adaptive eating utensils or cups, weighted vests, or pencil grips. An OT would never make a referral for such low-tech equipment, because they consider it a part of their domain. I posit that keyboarding software is a part of such equipment for most OT's. Similarly, many simple switches are part of a SLP's bailiwick as well.
Our Assistive Technology team considers our role as assessing need and prescribing technology interventions when the team "requires" such assistance.
If the team already has a handle on the tools required to create an effective intervention, they probably don't need an evaluation, or possibly even consultation.Assistive Technology teams are not here to replace your clinical reasoning.
That being stated, I do have staff who will utilize their considerable knowledge, plan interventions, and then call or email to to see what we think regarding what they are doing, and whether or not we think they "missed" something. In my estimation, this is a great way to use available resources.Other teams may handle such situations differently, and I'd be curious to hear from folks.
Thanks for reading, and happy therapy!
Return to School... searching for my muse
Good day folks. Here in North Carolina students are officially back in school, at least if they attend one of our many beleaguered public institutions they are.
It has been a looooong time since I last posted. I've had a terrific summer full of backpacking, mountain biking, family time, and the beach. Also, to be candid, my writing muse seems to have gone on a walk-about, and I've simply not felt the drive. I'm hoping to get back into the groove with this return to school!
Good luck this school year!
It has been a looooong time since I last posted. I've had a terrific summer full of backpacking, mountain biking, family time, and the beach. Also, to be candid, my writing muse seems to have gone on a walk-about, and I've simply not felt the drive. I'm hoping to get back into the groove with this return to school!
Good luck this school year!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)