Summary: This presentation will provide an overview of the STAR treatment approach, a short-term, intensive therapeutic intervention, with a significant parent education component, for individuals with sensory processing challenges. An emphasis will be placed on the multidisciplinary features of the approach with presentations from occupational therapy, speech and language pathology and mental health professionals. Videotaped segments of treatment will be highlighted, demonstrating the amalgamation of approaches used including sensory integration, DIR Floortime and Integrated Listening Systems. An additional focus will be placed on reviewing the current state of research on treatment effectiveness.
Presented live and recorded October 2015.
Level: Intermediate
Intended Audience: Occupational Therapists, physical therapists, speech and language pathologists, mental health providers, medical professionals, early intervention specialists, educators, and parents
Prerequisite: None
Presenters: Lucy Jane Miller, PhD, OTR/L founded STAR (Sensory Therapies And Research) Center in Denver, Colorado, the premier treatment center for SPD, currently serving as clinical director. In addition, in 1979 she founded the Sensory Processing Disorder Foundation, currently serving as its research director. In this role she oversees research at the Foundation and is widely known for fostering collaborative research projects with the SPD Scientific Work Group. She also develops norm-referenced standardized scales. Her ninth scale, the newly published Goal-Oriented Assessment of Lifeskills (GOAL), is now available through WPS. She has been featured on NBC’s Today Show, CBS’s Early Morning Show, and ABC’s 20/20, as well as in The New York Times and TIME magazine. She is the author of more than 60 articles and/or chapters in scientific and professional journals, magazines, and textbooks and is a frequent presenter and speaker at conferences and workshops worldwide. She has received more than 30 funded awards and grants to further research on SPD and other childhood disabilities. In 2005, Dr. Miller was honored by the state of Colorado, which awarded her the Martin Luther King Jr. award for three decades of work with disenfranchised children.
Karin Buitendag, MA, OTR/L started her professional career in South Africa where she worked in rehabilitation prior to shifting focus to the pediatric population. Karin worked in several private practices in South Africa prior to starting her own private practice in 1998, where she offered intervention to children from various backgrounds and with a variety of needs like Sensory Processing Disorder, Autistic Spectrum Disorders, Cerebral Palsy, ADD/ADHD, Learning Disabilities and general developmental delays. Karin was involved on a national level in South Africa, training occupational therapists in the Sensory Integration and Praxis Tests (SIPT) administration and interpretation, was chairperson of the South African Institute for Sensory Integration (SAISI) and was the SAISI representative at the Occupational Therapy Association of South Africa. Karin is also certified in Neurodevelopmental Therapy. Karin and her family moved to the United States in 2010 where she worked at a pediatric clinic in California as director of occupational therapy. She attended advanced training in Sensory Integration and has used her skills, experience and training to mentor and supervise occupational therapists in South Africa and in the United States. She published her Master’s degree research titled: “The relationship between developmental dyspraxia and sensory responsivity in children four years through eight years” in the South African Journal of Occupational Therapy in 2010 and 2012. Karin is currently the director of occupational therapy at STAR Center.
Roianne Ahn, PhD, and licensed psychologist, is trained in the DIR/Floortime relationship-based play model, which she infuses into every aspect of her work with children, teenagers, adults, and families. Whether providing consultation, testing, therapy, or coaching, Dr. Ahn focuses on creating positive, joyful relationship experiences that support and facilitate long-term learning. Through consultation, testing, therapy, and coaching, she helps individuals and caregivers understand the neurobiology underlying SPD and how to help those with SPD successfully learn, relate, and grow.
Carrie Dishlip, MS, CCC-SLP is a speech and language pathologist and has practiced in several different pediatric settings including a multidisciplinary SPD clinic, public schools, a hospital-based mental health treatment program, and private practice clinics. She served as an Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) specialist and has experience developing and running social skills programs. Carrie has taken the University of Southern California Advanced Training in Sensory Integrative Dysfunction and is PROMPT trained and Hanen Certified. She has led professional and parent workshops on social skills and AAC and has run the Hanen It Takes Two to Talk® and PROMPT PARENT/CAREGIVER® workshops
Sarah A. Schoen, PhD, OTR/L is Associate Director of Research at the Sensory Processing Disorder (SPD) Foundation and a clinical advisor to STAR (Sensory Therapies And Research) Center in Denver, Colorado. Dr. Schoen is an Occupational Therapist with 34 years of clinical experience and a doctorate in Occupational Therapy from New York University (2001). She was awarded the Developmental Psychology Endowment Grant from the William T. Grant Foundation to study the Sensory Processing Scales, which she is developing and researching with Dr. Lucy Jane Miller. Dr. Schoen is certified in Neurodevelopmental Treatment and has taught continuing education workshops nationally. She is currently an Associate Professor at the Rocky Mountain University of Health Professions and has served on multiple doctoral committees. She also co-developed and teaches the monthly Advanced Mentorship trainings at the SPD Foundation. Dr. Schoen has advanced training in Sensory Integration Therapy and clinical expertise with infants/toddlers with Regulatory Disorder, children with Sensory Processing Disorder, Autism Spectrum Disorder and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder. In 1997, Dr. Schoen received the Recognition of Achievement Award from the American Occupational Therapy Association and the Virginia Scardina Award of Excellence from the American Occupational Therapy Foundation in 2011.
Learning objectives:
- Acquire knowledge about the basic components of the STAR treatment approach
- Understand the role of Speech and Language Pathologist in the STAR treatment approach
- Understand the role of the Mental Health professional in the STAR treatment approach
- Discuss research related to the STAR treatment approach
Continuing Education: STAR Institute for Sensory Processing Disorder Foundation is an AOTA Approved Provider of Continuing Education. The assignment of AOTA CEUs does not imply endorsement of specific course content, products, or clinical procedures by AOTA.
Upon full completion of the course video, participants must complete and pass a quiz with at least 80% accuracy to receive a certificate of completion.