PROCESSING THROUGH PLAY
BY JEFF LINK
A pilot study suggests playground equipment can provide social and emotional benefits for children with sensory disorders.
FROM THE JUNE 2018 ISSUE OF LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE MAGAZINE.
Lucy Miller lost her sight when she was 16 and, in 1970, underwent one of the nation?s first corneal transplants. A procession of specialists flitted in and out of her recovery room?doctors, nurses, residents, fellows?but she recalls thinking that only the occupational therapist was interested in her as a person.
Shortly after her release from the hospital, she abandoned her plans to go to law school and headed to graduate school at Boston University to study occupational therapy. It wasn?t only the care and attention of her former occupational therapist who had led her to this decision. In the hospital, over several months when her eyes were surgically detached from her skull, she noticed her other senses had grown sharper. She wondered why, neurologically, this had happened, and was determined to find out. So, in her early twenties, still in graduate school, she embarked on a summer mentorship at the Torrance, California, clinic of Jean Ayers, the originator of a then-emerging field exploring the relationship between the sensory processing dysfunction and the behavior of children with disabilities. Nearly half a century later, Miller, who is the clinical director of the STAR Institute for Sensory Processing Disorder just south of Denver, has become one of the nation?s preeminen...
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