Drs. Fernettte & Brock E. Medical Doctor

Edmonds, Washington
My husband and I are physicians and advocates for children, teens, and college students who... Full Bio
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3 More Days to Register - Sensory Processing Online Conference

On November 12 & 13th, Lindsey Biel, OTR/L (Raising a Sensory Smart Child) and Drs. Brock and Fernette Eide (The Mislabeled Child) and will be...

7 More Days to Register - Sensory Processing Online Conference

On November 12 & 13th, Lindsey Biel, OTR/L (Sensory Smart Child) and Drs. Brock and Fernette Eide (The Mislabeled Child) and will be presenting...

Lazy Thinkers and Dysrationalia

Pop Quiz: Jack is looking at Anne, but Anne is looking at George. Jack is married but George is not. Is a married person looking at an unmarried...

Video Games Improve Night Vision

As we grow older, there are many factors that contribute to our difficulty seeing in the dark. A few of the reasons include a reduction in pupil...

Visual and Dyslexic Thinking and Learning Styles and the Educational Controversies

There's a lot of talk lately about 'Anti-Learning Styles' proponents like Daniel Willingham, a cognitive psychologist who says "cognitive...
Drs. Fernettte & Brock E.'s Whiteboard
Jun 12 2009 by Margaret N.

We have searched around for training for our school personnel and can't find any.  In town, local optometrists offer visual training for quite a fee.  I used to work for an opthalmologist, who pooh-poohed the visual training, and I can't see that anything optometrists do ( the assistants do it) is anything we can't do with some training.  Convergence insufficiency is the obvious choice for working with students, but as you mentioned, visual overload and shifting fixation are also problem areas we see in our school, --with evidence we can put out in terms of work samples and observations-- that we could use training in and address through programs that may take only ten minutes a day.  So, to get back to the real question, do you know of any training around that is available?  Some programs, such as Balametrics, inadvertently include some exercises that are helpful, I believe, but something "bonafide" ??  I am new to this posting business so ended up posting this on my whiteboard first... copied it in here...  We are near Sheridan, Oregon, so have sent some students to training at Forest Grove (Pacific University) or a Silverton optometrist... I'm not sure these are really glove fittings for what they need, but they have proved to be sporadically helpful.  Too bad about the cost and inconvenience for people it didn't help.
 
May 30 2009 by Margaret N.
So, I read in the New York Times that convergence insufficiency can affect as many as 1 in 5 people.  Wouldn't it make sense for classrooms to have a set of exercises available to address this?  Administering these exercises is done by aides or technicians in the office setting --I think teachers or teacher's aides can do it. In special ed we say that what helps special needs kids doesn't hurt "regular" kids; and it often helps them as much as the special ed kids.  What do you think?
 

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