Occupational Therapy: Motor Movers
Living to the Max
- Service type:
- Allied Health Support
- AHP type:
- Occupational therapy
- Support category:
- educator upskilling
- family and parenting support
- group child support
- Primary AEDC domain:
- physical health and wellbeing
- Secondary AEDC domains:
- emotional maturity
- social competence
- Delivery location:
- all areas of South Australia
- Delivery mode:
- in-person
- Program delivery:
- by supplier staff to groups of children, families or educators
- Tiered intervention:
- tier 1 universal whole service
- tier 2 targeted for specific cohorts or small groups
- Cost:
- moderate ($200-$2000 per person/item/hour)
Description
Our focus will be on supporting children to master motor skills required for engagement in their natural environment and in preparation for starting school. This will begin by reviewing the group’s status and then focus on skill development during group play with transition to ability to perform everyday activities. Families and educators will be engaged to develop skills in identifying developmental milestone delays and taught strategies to improve independence within all environments.
Our approach:
- addresses challenges against expected developmental milestones for fine motor and gross motor skills
- builds capacity of a child’s abilities with personal, domestic and community activities of daily living to reduce developmental vulnerabilities
- supports families and educators to act early for developmentally vulnerable children and develop independence within other environments and
- supports a child to engage in routines associated with getting ready for, attending and participating in school/kindy e.g. playing on the playgrounds with their peers, sitting in a classroom engaging in content and fine motor skills like drawing, cutting.
Expected outcomes are:
- improve ability to engage in activities of daily living by improvement in fine motor and gross motor skills
- improved motor skills to complete activities at school e.g. school bag on and off, jumper and shoes on and off, opening lunch box
- upskilling and education to a child’s support network to promote capacity building within the child’s environments and
- educators, parents and families have increased confidence to independently support children to build this capacity.
How this is delivered
It would be targeted as small group play based sessions using age-appropriate activities to address skill acquisition of children who present as developmentally vulnerable. As part of the service practical written content would be provided for family and parent upskilling including:
- how to incorporate therapeutic activities into the day to day
- play-based, child-led strategies and
- information and education regarding age-appropriate milestones and ‘flags’ for developmental vulnerability.
Likewise, practical written content would be provided for educators including:
- how to incorporate therapeutic activities into the day to day
- play-based, child-led strategies
- information and education regarding age-appropriate milestones and indicators for developmental vulnerability
- potential activities and how they may be adapted for varying children’s needs
- upskilling of developmental milestones and indicators of developmentally delayed and developmentally vulnerable children and
- resources for future reference and/or new staff.
Cost
Contact the provider
Contact name: Business Partner - Living to the Max and Ability Action Australia - Adelaide
Contact email: admin@livingtothemax.com.au
Contact phone: admin@livingtothemax.com.au
Contact website: https://livingtothemax.com.au/