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2
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5
100

Children with poor _______ abilities do not "feel" the pressure they need to apply when grasping a pencil. In this instance they may bear down too hard and write too darkly, or not apply enough pressure and write too lightly. 

Proprioceptive

100

This type of CP has less effect on muscle tone, but greatly affects BALANCE and COORDINATION.

Ataxia

100

Difficulty with motor planning is called _______ (especially children with sensory-based motor planning deficits)

Dyspraxia

100

Mark is unable to distinguish a dime from a nickel. What is he most likely having difficulty with?

Visual discrimination

100

Which pencil grasp is considered the most mature?

Dynamic tripod

200

What type of learner benefits from role playing and feeling the letters? 

Kinesthetic or tactile

200

What type of intervention is based on the theory of learned nonuse and requires children to try and use the affected hand?

Constraint-induced movement therapy

200

Swinging on a platform swing provides __________ and_________feedback to children.

Vestibular and proprioceptive

200

Oral motor difficulties, irritability, poor self-regulation, oversensitivity to sounds or touch, and colic are early signs of what?

Sensory Processing Dysfunction

200

A child with ______ disability may be able to write their name, remember their home phone number, understand written numbers and basic concepts of money. 

Moderate

300

Brigit is an 8-year-old girl who presses hard on the paper and frequently smears her letters and rips the paper. What do you expect to observe with her grasp pattern?


Tight Grasp

300

What co-occupation does a child learn at birth?

Feeding

300

__________ devices are used in an area of clinical practice that attempts to compensate (either temporarily or permanently) when an individual has difficulty using speech as a primary means of communication.

Communication technologies (Alternative Augmentative Communications AAC)

300

You are working with a child with CP. They are tolerating prone on elbows position well. Which of the following would be the MOST appropriate position to progress them further?

Quadruped

300

This level of motor function is described as " self-mobility with limitations. May use powered mobility; may walk short distances with a mobility device but relies primarily on wheeled mobility." (Level 1-5?)

IV 

400

Movements in and out of different positions are called _________.

Transitional Movements 

400

The __________ position is good for elongating and stretching the hip flexors.

Prone

400

_______are systems that allow an individual to control his or her environment.

Environmental control units

400

Rotary chew begins to develop around what age?

10-12 months

400

Children with _________ disorder have difficulties distinguishing between sensory stimuli. 

Sensory discrimination

500

True or False: Spasticity is a sign of lower motor neuron damage.

FALSE

500

The OT practitioner sets up the __________during therapy sessions, which is one that is neither too hard nor too easy,

Just-right challenge

500

_______ age refers to the age level at which the child is functioning, whereas chronological age refers to the child's actual age.

Mental

500

These are designed to lengthen tissues and correct deformities in children with CP through application of gentle forces sustained for extended periods with the goal of reducing tightness or spasticity in a selected muscle group.

Serial static orthoses and casts

500

What texture is easiest to begin with when transitioning to solid foods?

Smooth puree