Sunday, January 22, 2017

22: Celebration of Life is Special

It's Celebration of Life Day (http://holidaysofyear.com/celebration-of-life-day/)in America. We  will look at this celebration of children and grandchildren a few times this week, since other countries have a week long celebration of children. Many people take today to celebrate and lavishly honor these young lives with gifts and sweets, but it is also a day to take a careful look at each child you know  in a positive light and truly recognize what makes each youngster in your life unique and special.
I wanted to bring you a nonprofit with a bade of  celebrating children, and guess what? I found Celebrate The Children, A School for Children with Alternative Learning Styles (CTC). I appreciate that every step of the way CTC focuses on the individuality of each child and his or her needs and desires an outcome of success and happiness. As a school, CTC focuses on each child but also on training family and caregivers, research, DIR®, and on-site classrooms where. "The curriculum incorporates all components of the Celebrate the Children program with a heavy focus on independence, abstract thinking and social skills preparing them for less restrictive environments." (http://www.celebratethechildren.org/about.html) "Developmental, Individual-Difference, Relationship-Based (DIR®) Approach (also known as Floortime™) offers a developmental approach to intervention for children with special needs in partnership with their parents. " and you can find more about it here: www.profectum.org
The curriculum of CTC takes children from elementary school through high school and into transitional programming in the workplace. I feel this model itself should be celebrated along with the children today, which is why I chose CTC. I had a hard time choosing which part I thought was most important to post here for you to read, and  I think Monica Osgood (co-founder with Linda Blaszak) says it best here:
Progress must start with a relationship. We want to support children to become happy, secure, social and creative people, who can think outside the box and think on their feet. We must respect and support each child's unique profile while promoting development through meaningful, relationship-based experiences. The relationships that support this development are built on respect and trust. For children who experience the world in an often disorganized and sometimes fearful way, these trusting relationships require patience and nurturing. A key component of our approach is the involvement of families in the intervention. Sometimes this simply starts with helping the parent and child get back to a place where they can enjoy each other again rather than solely focusing on the challenges. Once we have taken the time to get to know the child and learn about the unique way in which they experience the world, we can support them in reaching higher levels of development.  Autism is a sensory-processing disorder, not an intellectual disorder. Many ASD children are highly intelligent and often gifted. Therefore, if we can make a connection with them, we can tap into all the wonderful gifts they have to offer. We target development from the foundations of self-regulation and engagement, all the way through emotional and abstract thinking and reflection. The most recent research in the field of autism now supports the notion that critical neurological connections are made when children are engaged in pleasurable and meaningful interactions with their caregiver.
Research identifies engagement, joint attention, as required in order for language and cognition to develop. We also know much more about how all kinds of learning occurs. We understand that we learn with our minds and our bodies. For example, we need to incorporate the understanding of how the ability to see things from different views supports the gestalt of what we are discovering and learning; how the ability to plan and sequence motor actions is related to initiating and sequencing ideas. This whole-body approach to learning is progressive but, at the same time, so fundamental in the world of developmental approaches to learning. When children learn to master and integrate their emotions, ideas, and bodies, the sky is the limit!
Monica G. Osgood 1998, 2011

I hope you take a look at any children in your life today and see the beauty and wonder of who that child is and also who he or she might someday become. If you want an activity for today, you might try having your child write a not to his or her future self. .  Have a great Celebration of Life today and this week.

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