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Sierra Boehm

Executive Functions: Their Impact on Learning and Solutions for Remediation - Webinar -... - 0 views

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    Register for this webinar and view all webinars in this series COPAA is offering five webinars  as part of this summer series. You are welcome to register for individual sessions or for the entire series of sessions. More information: Summer series - Fall series  What: Are you advocating for a child who struggles to pace himself, becomes easily distracted, forgets to write down assignments, has difficulty getting started on tasks, becomes overwhelmed, or performs inconsistently? If so, this child may have deficits in executive functioning which impact his or her learning. Executive functioning deficits are often intertwined with a wide range of disabilities and have an adverse impact on a child's ability to be successful at school. Education advocates Ann McCarthy and Laurie Markus will demystify the term 'executive functioning' by explaining in practical terms what it is and how it impacts school functioning. When: Tuesday, June 4, 2013 12:00 pm - 1:30 pm Mountain Cost: $79.00 per session or $275.00 for the summer series (all 5 sessions) $599.00 Annual Webinar Subscription: Includes ALL Live and Archived Sessions (Member discounts available)
Roger Holt

What is Executive Function? - 0 views

  • Executive function is a set of mental processes that helps connect past experience with present action. People use it to perform activities such as planning, organizing, strategizing, paying attention to and remembering details, and managing time and space.
Roger Holt

Executive Skills and Your Child with Learning Disabilities - 0 views

  • As the parent of a school-age child with learning disabilities (LD), you know that basic patterns of thought such as controlling impulses, flexibility, planning, and organizing must steadily develop and improve as a child advances in school. If they don’t, children fail in small ways and larger ones. Each assignment not completed — or completed but not turned in — each lost notebook and late, hurried project, takes a toll on a child’s self-esteem (and a parent’s patience). Performance anxiety becomes more and more exhausting. The stress of feeling overwhelmed leads some children to misbehave, others to withdraw. Some children decide it’s less scary not to try than it is to try and fail.These brain-based habits of thought are crucial to all learning. They are called executive skills.
Roger Holt

InBrief: Executive Function: Skills for Life and Learning - 0 views

  • Being able to focus, hold, and work with information in mind, filter distractions, and switch gears is like having an air traffic control system at a busy airport to manage the arrivals and departures of dozens of planes on multiple runways. In the brain, this air traffic control mechanism is called executive functioning, a group of skills that helps us to focus on multiple streams of information at the same time, and revise plans as necessary.
Roger Holt

Mark Bertin, M.D.: ADHD Goes to School - 0 views

  • When a child has a language delay, people tend to accept this fact at face value: Joseph is 6 but speaks like a 3-year-old. While understandably upsetting to many parents, no one expects Joseph to speak differently before he is able. There's a scramble to start services and a patient approach while allowing language to develop. The same attitude does not hold for attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). ADHD is a developmental delay in a broad skill set called executive function. A huge body of research defines it as a medical disorder; neither parents nor children benefit when people suggest otherwise.
Sierra Boehm

Apps for OCD, ADHD, LD, Anxiety, and Executive Function Impairments - Webinar - Dec. 3,... - 0 views

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    Register for this webinar What:
    Yes, "there is an app for that." Many individuals experience challenges associated with symptoms related to a variety of neurobehavior disabilities. This webinar will explore apps for organization; time management, remembering, self initiation, self regulation, task transitioning, and symptom tracking. These apps can have a profound influence in accommodating for a variety of symptoms that individuals might experience.

    When:
    Tuesday, December 3, 2013
    1:30 pm - 3:00 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    $49.00 - Live Broadcast
Sierra Boehm

Using Technology to Stay On Time, On Task & Organized - Webinar - Nov. 19, 2013 - 0 views

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    Register for this event

    What:
    Many students and adults struggle with productivity skills -- the ability to effectively manage time, get started, stay focused, organize, plan, and analyze problems.  Merely "trying harder" won't help, but "trying different" can. This webinar will demonstrate how technology, coupled with appropriate strategies, can improve these executive function skills.

    When:
    Tuesday, November 19, 2013
    4:30 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    No cost
Sierra Boehm

Manage Problem Behavior in the Classroom - Webinar - Oct. 24, 2013 - 0 views

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    Register for this event

    What:
    Dr. Bridget A. Taylor, Psy.D., BCBA-D, renowned educator and Executive Director of the Alpine Learning Group, will discuss how to determine the function of challenging classroom behaviors and effective strategies for managing them.

    When:
    4:00 pm Mountain

    Cost:
    No cost
Terry Booth

Assistive Technology Industry Association (ATIA) 2011 Webinar Series - Webinar - Jan. -... - 0 views

  • The Assistive Technology Industry Association (ATIA) 2011 Webinar Series has added a new collection of live, interactive, online educational events. They cover a broad range of topics to help you enhance your knowledge of assistive technology and the skills needed to support the products and process.  ATIA has tapped into national leaders in their field to bring you this outstanding collection of webinars.  Upcoming webinars for JANUARY through JUNE - You can go to our website for complete session abstracts, learning outcomes, and speaker biographies: Don't miss our new "There's An App for That" Series with Dr. Therese Willkomm and Phyllis Watson who bring you in-depth discussions of the apps for selected functional areas.  Sign-up for all three at one time and receive a discount! AT11-WEB01:  Apps for the iPad, iTouch, & iPhone on Remembering, Prompting, Organizing, Assessing, and Increasing Productivity - REGISTER Thursday, January 13, 2011   1:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Mountain Time Overview:  Productivity at home, school and work is affected by how well we are organized and can remember essential tasks that need to be performed.  This webinar will demonstrate apps that can help with executive functioning such as reminders and prompts to completing essential tasks.  In addition, the webinar will also review various apps related to organization, time management, and online assessment tools.  - Full abstract AT11-WEB04:  Apps for the iPad, iTouch, & iPhone on Alternative and Augmentative Communication - REGISTER Thursday, February 17, 2011   1:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Mountain Time Overview:  There are over 30 different apps that can benefit individuals who experience various communication impairments.  This webinar will review 20 of the most successful apps for children and adults.  In addition, apps related to sign language will also be discussed. - Full abstract AT11-WEB08:  Apps for the iPad, iTouch, & iPhone on Reading, Writing and Arithmetic - REGISTER Wednesday, March 23, 2011   1:30 p.m. - 2:30 p.m. Mountain Time Overview:   This webinar will demonstrate apps that can assist in reading using text to speech, narration, and audio books; apps that use voice recognition or text expanders to increase writing ability and speed; flash card apps and math tutorial apps; and apps that will quiz you. - Full abstract
Terry Booth

Cognitive Support Technologies: A New Comprehensive Resource - Webinar - March 15, 2011 - 0 views

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    Click here to register for this event What:
    This webinar provides resources for keeping up to date with new cognitive support technologies and provides examples of products and vendors. Cognitive Support Technologies are a class of AT designed to help with memory, attention, concentration, perception, executive functioning and so on. Depending on individual need and preference, individuals with dementia, or traumatic and acquired brain injury or who were born with intellectual disability, can potentially benefit from: Personal Assistance Strategies Everyday Technologies (e.g. Apple iPhone) Specialized Technologies (e.g. Jitterbug phone) Which one, or combination, is most appropriate for an individual requires an early and comprehensive assessment.The presentation will outline the process for selecting, integrating and utilizing assistive technology for persons with cognitive disability. Each stage of the process will be examined in depth, as will the parameters requiring consideration at each stage.  When:
    March 15, 2012
    1:30 p.m. - 3:00 p.m. Mountain Time
Terry Booth

Technology in Action - Billings - July 27 & 28, 2011 - 0 views

  • What: This conference will provide information and hands-on training in the latest technology being used to enhance communication and social skills for individuals living with autism. This conference is for everyone who loves and works with children and adults with autism every day. This year we will highlight Communication and iOS devices - iPads, iPods and iPhones. Today’s technological advances offer highly interactive tools that can be used to help build communication skills. During our event you will learn how to choose applications appropriate for your needs, whether you are a parent, educator or practitioner. Through demonstration and actual hands-on training you will be introduced to a variety of applications that use interactive text, illustrations, painting, animation, voice recording, stories, songs and speech/language based activities that may be helpful in developing communication abilities of children and adults on the Autism spectrum. Practitioners can use these devices to help people with cognitive-behavioral needs through applications that target social skills and executive functioning like planning, organization, attention and memory.  We will also benefit from meeting and hearing from people of all ages who are navigating through life on the spectrum. Their stories will inspire, educate and bring us closer as a group as we take action to improve the lives of individuals with autism. This conference is for everyone who loves and works with children and adults with autism every day. Join us as we continue our work for Montana families living with autism. When: July 27 & 28, 2011 8:00am - 5:00pm (both days) Where: MSUB Main Campus - Library Room 148 Billings, MT Register: Call 406-896-5890 to register for this event; visit http://www.msubillings.edu/autism/ for more information.
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