The Out-of-Sync Child: Recognizing and Coping with Sensory Integration
Do
you know
a child
who
plays
too
rough,
is
uncoordinated,
hates
being
touched,
is
ultra-sensitive
(or
unusually
insensitive)
to noise
or
sensations
of heat
and
cold?
Many
pediatricians
and
other
experts
are
beginning
to
recognize
a link
between
some of
these
apparently
unrelated
behavior
patterns.
Children
with
perfectly
normal
"far
senses"
(such as
sight
and
hearing)
may
have,
because
of a
poorly
integrated
nervous
system,
serious
problems
with
their
"near
senses,"
including
touch,
balance,
and
internal
muscle
sensation.
It's
called
Sensory
Integration
Dysfunction,
or SI.
The
announcement
of yet
another
new
syndrome
is bound
to raise
skeptical
eyebrows--and
with
good
reason.
(How do
we know
which
child
really
has SI,
and
which
one just
happens
to share
some of
the same
symptoms?)
Author
Carol
Stock
Kranowitz
argues
convincingly,
however,
that for
some
children
SI is a
real
disorder,
and that
it is
devastating
partly
because
it so
often
looks
like
nothing
so much
as
"being
difficult."
And,
whatever
the
scientific
status
of SI,
Kranowitz
carefully
details
many
routines
and
remedies
that
will
help
children--and
the
parents
of
children--who
exhibit
the
behaviors
described
- ISBN: 0399531653
