Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

by Pennsylvania Diversity Children's Organization
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder
Teaching 6 children with Autism Spectrum Disorder

Project Report | Jan 8, 2018
Every Sensory Experience Counts!

By Tetyana Varenychenko | Project Leader

Dear our Donors,

We appreciate your generocity, and we would like to say you Thank You again and again. Children with autism spectrum disorder or social communication difficulties can experience the world quite differently than others.  For example, a typical child may enjoy the flashy lights and sounds of an amusement park. Going to the local carnival on a warm spring night and spending the night riding amusements, enjoying carnival games, cotton candy, loud music and experiencing the overall excitement that comes with a carnival is a great childhood experience. That carnival was a multi-sensory experience.  Now a take a child with autism spectrum disorder and that childhood may experience the same carnival in completely different way. The experience can be quite overwhelming resulting in fear, agitation or even seizures. The point being children need to be stimulated in order to learn yet also feel calm, safe and relaxed.  

A sensory room has special lighting, calm music, bubbles, various tactile toys and furniture to stimulate the mind. The experience relaxes the child and yet allows the child to have a multi-sensory experience, much like the child who went to the carnival.  The sensory room is created with two goals in mind: to promote intellectual activity and relaxation.

Penndco children deserve an environment that is conducive to learning.  While the traditional classroom may benefit one child, another child may benefit from a sensory room where varying lights and textures gently stimulate the brain allowing the child to reenter the traditional classroom, relaxed and ready to learn.

Recent statistics in Pennsylvania show that 1 in 68 children are diagnosed with autism spectrum disorder. With statistics this staggering the need for innovative therapies to bring about the best outcomes is dire. We continue to ask our Best Donors to support us with providing our valuable services for children and their families. Every Penny Counts!

Share on Twitter Share on Facebook

Oct 9, 2017
Learning To Play Together!

By Tetyana Varenychenko | Project Leader

Jul 10, 2017
Ready for Success!

By Tetyana Varenychenko | Project Leader

About Project Reports

Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.

If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can recieve an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.

Sign up for updates

Organization Information

Pennsylvania Diversity Children's Organization

Location: Huntingdon Valley, PA - USA
Website:
Facebook: Facebook Page
Twitter: @PENNDCO
Project Leader:
Tetyana Varenychenko
Huntingdon Valley , PA United States

Learn more about GlobalGiving

Teenage Science Students
Vetting +
Due Diligence

Snorkeler
Our
Impact

Woman Holding a Gift Card
Give
Gift Cards

Young Girl with a Bicycle
GlobalGiving
Guarantee

Get incredible stories, promotions, and matching offers in your inbox

WARNING: Javascript is currently disabled or is not available in your browser. GlobalGiving makes extensive use of Javascript and will not function properly with Javascript disabled. Please enable Javascript and refresh this page.