Class One
Class Two
Class Three
Class Four
Class Five
100

What are the two "internal senses?"

What is vestibular and proprioceptive.

100

The cause of SPD

What is there is NO known cause of SPD

100

The largest sensory organ

What is skin

100

The unifying system that forms the basic relationship of a person to gravity and the physical world

What is the vestibular system

100

The ability of the brain to conceive an idea, plan the action, integrate sensory input, and execute the action

What is motor planning

200

When does sensory processing develop?

What is before birth and takes place automatically in normal development. A child matures and is well integrated by 8 to 10.

200

Percentage of sensory info that is visual 

What is 80%
200

A child who is constantly in a state of red alert and reacts negatively to light touch 

What is Tactile Hypersensitivity 

200

_____ % of vision goes into the vestibular system

What is 20%

200

Allows us to unconsciously anticipate next steps, strength or speed required to complete a motor action

What is feedforward 

300

Where is sensory information processed?

What is the central nervous system.

300

Both eyes working together

What is Eye Teaming

300

A child who may get hurt and not realize it but is always touching someone or something

What is Tactile HYPOsensitivity 

300

Name three functions of the vestibular system

What are: perception of speed and direction of movement, balance, co-ordinate eye movement with head movement, bilateral coordination, emotional security, visual spatial processing

300

Examples of what praxic disorder looks like in early childhood

What is difficulty with self care, difficulty with play activities, inconsistency in performance, poor repertoire of pretend play, imitates but doesn't initiate

400

What are two problems SPD can be caused by? 

What is problems getting the impulse to the brain, problem within the brain stem, or communication between parts of the brain.
400

The five building blocks of taste

What is sweet, sour, salty, bitter, umami 

400

The location in which propriceptors are located

What is the muscles, tendons and joints

400

Strategies to help the vestibular system

What are movement experiences, encouraging active child-propelled movements, encourage bilateral activities, encourage activities in which the child lies on his/her stomach and lifts their head up

400

Strategies with Motor Planning Dysfunction

What is helping the child physically move through the action, minimising visual distractions, rehearse what the child has learned on a regular basis, tasks presented must offer a challenge and success

500

The sensory integration specialty was originally developed by.

What is A. Jean Ayres

500

Strategies for assisting a child with under-sensitivity low registration auditory input

What is gaining the child's attention prior to giving instruction, preferential seating, "Arc of Arms" Rule, teacher modeling, breaking down tasks, have the child repeat information after it has been presented
500

Strategies to help develop proprioceptive/kinesthetic awareness

What is "active" transition activities, pulling and pushing weighted objects, body awareness games, weighted backpacks during obstacle courses, wall push-ups, weighted blankets & vests

500

Another name for motion sickness

What is kinetosis 

500

The conceptualization of an intention to act

What is ideation