The Hows And Whys Of Floortime Therapy



Learning and developing is not just about academics. As children, every individual goes through an important phase of developing crucial social, emotional, language, motor and cognitive skills, which lay the ground for a healthy social life and effective academic pursuits. According to the DIR or Developmental, Individual-Differences, Relationship-based model, developed by Dr. Stanley Greenspan, each child is born with an emotional system that needs nurturing. This essential nurturing can be provided only through warm, interpersonal interactions.
For children with autism and other disorders of relating and communicating, basic developmental skills are compromised due to the challenges faced by them in initiating and responding to attempts at communication. This is where Floortime Therapy; the practical application of the DIR model by Dr. Stanley Greenspan, can help.



What is Floortime therapy?

As the name suggests, Floortime therapy involves “getting on the floor” with the child to try to enter into their world and bring them into yours. The therapy is not restricted to the floor and can extend to any place or situation in which you find an opportunity to interact with the child.

What are the steps of a typical Floortime therapy session?

Floortime therapy can be carried out by not only therapists but parents and educators as well. The typical steps of a Floortime therapy session involve:

·         Observing the child to assess their interests and intentions

See what holds the child’s interests in the present moment. Try to join them in whatever they are doing or what they seem to intend to do. For instance, if the child is stacking blocks one on top of the other, assist them in the activity by handing over the next block and cheering them on.

This primary step helps establish a foundation of trust, opening up opportunities for meaningful interactions.

·         Challenge the child

Challenging the child in a gentle and encouraging manner can help foster essential motor, language and cognitive skills. For example, you could place one of the blocks on top of a short cabinet for your child to retrieve. Creating increasingly complex motor challenges makes the child likely to learn key motor skills. Similarly, you can challenge the child to develop their language skills by asking them to voice out their ideas and encouraging them to talk, in general.

Floortime therapy is a compassionate, gentle and encouraging method to challenge children on the autism spectrum to reach key developmental milestones. Teaching your child to communicate and relate as well as overcome their motor skills deficits can help them become more receptive to the world around them, as well as assist them during academic lessons and activities as they progress in school and beyond.

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