Occupational therapy is a healthcare profession concerned with helping people of all ages to better perform those tasks that occupy their time. For children, this typically means playing and learning, as well as eating, getting dressed, grooming and so on. An OT provides carefully designed challenges that build on your child's unique strengths and interests to build developmental skills such as...
If a child isn't interested, fidgets constantly, or simply doesn't look at what she is doing, she can't learn effectively. An OT will help you discover what motivates your child, makes his body ready to learn (that is, what helps him keep still, calm, and alert), and to pay attention and stay focused.
A child needs to effectively use information derived from all the senses that pick up input from the environment (vision, hearing, touch, smell, and taste) as well as from inside the body (movement and internal body awareness). All this input must be registered by sensory receptors, processed in the brain, and acted upon in an adaptive way for a child to function at her best.
Many children have difficulty with fine motor skills such as drawing, using scissors, buttoning, and stringing beads. Their small hand muscles are still maturing, and they may not have developed the strength, coordination, and dexterity they need. OTs also work on gross motor skills that use "larger" muscles, such as throwing and catching a ball, climbing stairs and playground equipment, jumping and hopping, and so on.
Children have lots of ADL tasks to master, and most children love becoming independent with these tasks. OTs help children learn to eat with utensils, drink from a cup, get dressed and undressed, take a shower or bath, use the toilet, and handle grooming and hygiene tasks age-appropriately.
From stacking blocks to doing puzzles to understanding geometry, a child must be able to perceive differences and relationships between objects in the environment. An OT can help a child to form a mental map of how the world works and where he fits in it, all of which are essential to feeling physically and emotionally secure.
Over the years, the time spent learning and practicing handwriting in school has dramatically decreased. Handwriting skills, from the basics of letter formation to taking class notes legibly, can be extremely difficult for some children to learn quickly. OTs use a fun multisensory approach to handwriting, including use of touch (e.g., using a wet finger to write on a chalkboard) and sound (teaching a special story about how a specific letter is formed).
Low-tech devices (like pencil grips and slantboards) and high-tech equipment (like adapted computers) are increasingly used in schools. If your child needs them, he has a legal right to use them. An OT can help you to find the right AT for your child, teach him how to use it, and help integrate it into the classroom. Many OTs work with kids with mild to profound physical disabilities, helping them function at their best using wheelchairs and other ambulatory devices as well as helping non-verbal children access communication devices that help them communicate with the world.