School based physical therapy activities and ideas that can be used for direct service or collaboration with a child's school based team.
Learn from school based physical therapist, Marissa, as she shares how teachers can collaborate best with school physical therapy providers!
Ideas, guides and resources for school based physical therapy documentation and school based occupational therapy documentation.
Are you new to the world of school based therapy? If so, here are 5 blog posts that will help you hit the ground running. 8 Getting To...
The author, Carlo Vialu, PT, MBA, is co-creator of SeekFreaks. He loves promoting function and participation for children and youth with disabilities, from our assessment to our interventions, via his continuing education webinars at Apply EBP. More information on
School based physical therapy resources. Resources for the new or seasoned physical therapist working in the school setting.
Learn from school based physical therapist, Marissa, as she shares how teachers can collaborate best with school physical therapy providers!
Learn from school based physical therapist, Marissa, as she shares how teachers can collaborate best with school physical therapy providers!
Five Fun Activities with Dyna Discs! Dyna Disc activities for children to address balance, strength, motor planning & posture!
Scheduling Tips for School-Based Therapists Over the last few weeks, the Your Therapy Source survey was on scheduling tips for school-based therapists. It was a simple two question survey: what is your job title and what is your best suggestion for creating therapy schedules? You can answer the current survey here. For question #1, the majority respondents (66%) were occupational therapists. Here are the 50+ responses to the question: what is your best suggestion for creating therapy schedules? Group by school, then consider eligibility/meeting days, then best time to see students that day dependent on individual goals/class fine motor or visual motor time. In the school based setting, one needs to schedule according to teachers schedules in school; some are more flexible than others. Check with teachers regarding classroom schedules including reading and math blocks, specials (PE, art, music, etc.). I usually ask them for the best and worst time to see students. Check student goals to see which can be accomplished in the classroom (and therefore helpful to teacher too) and match up students with similar goals and level of function. I am a teletherapist so I use a shared google calendar for one of my schools so that my paraprofessional can see when I am available and so that she can schedule my students during my available time. For my virtual students, I send the parents an email using the mixmax add on so that they are able to click their time preference. If I am available, it automatically schedules them on my google calendar. If I am not available, then they can choose another option from the times in my email. google calender I wish I knew Be flexible, Write in Pencil, Schedule middle and high school first, as their schedules are typically less flexible. Begin with a pencil! I have a loose schedule the first 2 weeks of school. I usually coordinate with the speech therapist first since they usually see the student multiple times per week. I have also found that if I schedule a school on meeting days I have a better chance of being the only related service that sees students on that day. If I miss a student that day due to a meeting, I can add them with another student that same day! Outlook Calendar so it syncs with those scheduling meetings and can be shared with select teachers, admin etc….. Go to the teachers first and find out when is the best time to schedule their students. I have a schedule starter sheet. It is a list with an empty day schedule on the left side to be filled out as I establish good times to see the student. On the right, it lists the student’s name, grade, teacher, IEP date and service time, lunch and special times, and I get from the teachers the best time to see the students (so I avoid instruction time). On the top of the sheet, it has the school hours, and a grid for a list of the different service providers for that school, PE teacher, school nurse. I use this sheet throughout the school year to add new students, or mark when they have moved out of district. I go around to all of my schools, get the individual calendars and the staff list with phone extensions, the specials, lunch, and recess schedules. I schedule the schools with the largest number of students first, and then fill in with the schools with fewer students. Determine need of districts sped students, With job description, allot time needed for paperwork and collaboration. Curriculum of students should communicate needs or gaps that OT can help with…if we are “academic based”. I wish I knew Consolidate holiday sessions Schedule older students and those who receive all services first I make three different options for each child then regardless of who is absent I have alternatives to who is available for any given block of time. It really is less work than it sounds. Schedule the hardest students to fit into an OT schedule. Schedule students that are in the middle school first as they change classes. then scheduled the elementary students who are in the same class throughout the day. If possible, bring the entire team (teachers and other therapists) together to work out mutually compatible schedules so it’s not a “race” to see who claims their “day” first. If that could be done at the schools where you spend the most time, then hopefully other schools, with small caseloads, will be flexible with what’s left of your time and things will work! It’s worth hoping!! Get the whole school schedule and then build in your times around recess/lunch specials. Push into language arts Communicate directly with teachers and other therapists, and be flexible! Teachers know how to pair students well. put it in pencil- you know you are going to have to change it 100 times! Flexibility! Speaking with the student’s teacher is of course, an initial contact that must be made to ensure smooth scheduling. Showing an investment in the student and communicating a respect for the teacher’s predetermined classroom time and scheduling sets off the year to a good start. I try to find natural lulls during the school day — planned movement breaks or recess plus or minus a few minutes. I try to avoid pulling students during those times in the day when I’ve observed them come most alive in the classroom. (That is calendar time for some of my kiddos!). Routine is really important to most of my students, and I try to give them this consistency as often as I can. I am still working on it!!! Our supervisor tells us what day to go to each school so within the day I have to figure out when to see the kids. First I plug in who may go home early, then when each grades lunch and specials are. Then I look at IEP to see what subject OT supports. Try to fit it all into a puzzle by hand. I do best with sticky note tabs or pencil and paper. Coordinating between school administration and other therapy services. I try to set a day and time frame for the building (ie Thursday afternoons) when asking classroom teachers for serving the students. I then ask for their schedule,and find opportunities within their own schedule, and then work towards supporting the student within their own classroom working on items that relate to therapy supported educational goals.By setting day and time since we all seem to cover many buildings,it provides an opportunity to be more consistent on a weekly basis in servicing all students within all buildings. Be flexible! Write initial schedule in pencil and be prepared to change it…many times! Flexibility! I try to schedule time in a school and then “catch” the students during their PE class, music class, recess, diaper changes, or when getting on/off the bus and use those opportunities to teach staff while I do therapy with the students. Lead and teach by example. Gathering all the specials schedules(art, music, PE) and core subjects so we have those before putting students on a schedule. Also getting classroom schedules helps with knowing when to push-in for writing, etc. Meeting with special ed teachers to work on the schedule together greatly helps. Start early! Before school starts. Most schools have master schedules completed before school starts. Set up a meeting with your school administrators. I work in a rural district and travel to multiple schools in a day. My travel path is what dictates my therapy schedule which is probably not the best but when traveling to 4-5 schools in a day, it truly is my only option. Within the time I am within each school, I try to be the least disruptive to each child’s regular schedule whenever possible. Depends on teachers and special class schedules in school. I usually work in between. Patience! Start early with the most difficult students to schedule and be prepared to correct LOTS of drafts. We try to work with the student where they are struggling the most. I email each teacher or grade (some share students) for suggestions – not perfect but they know their schedule better than I can just by looking at a master schedule. Email school principal / secretary the week before school starts to have them email you special / lunch / recess schedules/ class lists. Take an empy schedule with times and then write every student’s name for that building on the tiny sticky notes (1/4″ or so by 1 to 1 1/2″). After getting the special schedules etc. start placing stickies in the time slots of your empty schedule. I like to email the teachers with times then they can reference that time or let you know if it is not a good time, or write it on a card for them if you have several students in their class. Other than being flexible and starting asap, provide the teacher with 2, or even 3, time slots. Some teachers are so flexible but for those who are not, giving them a choice seems to help our future relationship if you know what I mean! Ask at the office for the master specials, lunch and recess schedule before talking to any teacher about a specific student. Prioritize scheduling students who mainstream from self-contained homerooms to general education settings first. Then schedule resource room students next. Then schedule general education students and last schedule full day self-contained. Be sure to schedule in travel time between schools and for students who may need to be picked up to/from their class. Share your schedule with the teachers as you complete it to receive quick feedback about scheduling conflicts or circumstances and ultimately share it with the pertinent case managers, principals, CST secretary, school secretary, counselors and special area teachers for each student. pray. LOL. First find out about ‘special’ schedules, then talk to ST to coordinate with them, and then the teachers. Build in room to be flexible if at all possible Create a survey asking teachers the 3 best times to work with students and then attempt to create a schedule from this. Start with the students with the highest minutes. Group by location. Keep calm and schedule on! Plan early and be flexible Class time Collaborate with special education teachers for push-in times; set up a meeting time with speech/PT/etc to set schedules with teachers. Schedule your kids with the most restrictive availability first. Tell them your schedule is very tight, every change has a domino effect and you wish you could be more flexible. Say it very nicely, with a smile. Scheduling has to be a balance of the client’s needs and yours as a therapist. Make schedule then present to teachers. Make as early as possible. Create an excel spreadsheet and paste names into time blocks and shuffle as needed. Good luck everyone! Scheduling is a super stressful time. But, once done it is such a relief to get started working with the students! Please take a moment to participate in the current survey here. Once all your students are scheduled, stay organized with the Therapy Planner. The new, updated planners are ready for you to get started on organizing your work life. FIND OUT MORE INFORMATION ON THE THERAPY PLANNERS AND SEE THE DESIGNS The post 50+ Scheduling Tips for School Based Therapists appeared first on Your Therapy Source.
SIX School Based Physical Therapy Posters/ Signs!! Post on your room or gym walls and/or door! Don't have a room? post on your closet or locker! Not lucky enough to have any of these, then laminate and pin to your therapy bag!! Great for bulletin boards!Increase your visibility in the schools even w...
Pediatric Physical Therapy Documentation is very different than adult orthopedic and neurological physical therapy documentation because when you’re working with kids, the interventions you are completing are play based, functional, and take more critical analytical skills to produce documentation t
In a school-based setting it can feel tricky to find good ways to have a successful physical therapy session, yet be as much in that students natural environment as possible. Personally, I'm always looking for
School based physical therapy resources. Resources for the new or seasoned physical therapist working in the school setting.
The author, Carlo Vialu, PT, MBA, is co-creator of SeekFreaks. He loves promoting function and participation for children and youth with disabilities, from our assessment to our interventions, via his continuing education webinars on Apply EBP. More
ool-based PT, resulting in variations in practice across the United States. The authors examined 22 state and local education agency guidelines available online to find commonalities related to the determination of a student's need for PT. Results and Conclusions: Seven commonalities found: educational benefit, team decision, need for PT expertise, establishment of Individualized Education Program (IEP) goal before determining need for PT, distinction between medical and educational PT, the student's disability adversely affects education, and the student's potential for improvement. These commonalities are discussed in relation to current PT and special education literature. This article suggests applying these commonalities as procedural requirements and questions for discussion during an IEP team meeting....
A simple Daily Therapy log to send home with students after a session. It is a quick Check-list with comments if needed to let parents know how there child is doing in therapy. As a school-based physical therapist with a LARGE caseload it is hard to find a time to communicate with all of my clients families. This is an easy way to keep the parent updated so if they have questions or concerns they can contact you easily! Instant Download! If you find you need something adjusted or would like a personal Log Sheet Made please message me.
The author, Carlo Vialu, PT, MBA, is co-creator of SeekFreaks. He loves promoting function and participation for children and youth with disabilities, from our assessment to our interventions, via his webinars on various assessment tools at Apply EBP. More
After seeing this post on Pinterest from Creative Clinical Social Worker, I thought it would be helpful to post about terminology to use for pediatric therapy. If you follow my blog or website, you know I love the words "facilitate", "promote" and "encourage". When documenting therapy sessions I tend to overuse the words "completed" and "accomplished". So in order to expand my vocabulary I looked over the list and added some of my own. Some of the terms are more suitable for evaluations and some are more suitable for on going documentation of therapy sessions. Try adding some measurable outcomes to these verbs for goal setting. Here is a list of documentation terminology for pediatric therapists: Accomplished Assessed Assisted with Completed Created Cued Decreased Developed Discussed Educated Elicited Encouraged Engaged Explained Explored Evaluated Facilitated Generalized Guided Helped Identified Increased Informed Investigated Modeled Modified Monitored Observed Problem solved Promoted Provided feedback Reviewed Reinforced Responded to Recommended Taught Tracked Utilized Validated Worked on If you would like a printable of this page to toss in your therapy bag, wallet or purse to increase your vocabulary next time you write up an evaluation or session note visit YourTherapySource.com. What is your favorite documentation terminology?