Integrated Student
Support Services
Physical Therapists
Role
Physical
therapists (PTs) who work in schools collaborate with a student’s
education team and family members to identify physical problems
that limit access to general education classrooms and play/recreational
settings. PTs assess mobility, positioning, posture, range of motion,
strength, sensorimotor skills, and organization of movement in educational
environments. If physical therapy is deemed necessary by a student’s
PPT, these can take the form of school-or family-based consultation
or direct services. With students with severe disabilities PTs are
often instrumental in recommending equipment or environmental modifications
that encourage access, increase independence, and ensure safety.
Click
here to read more about the profession of physical therapy.
Within IDEA ’97 physical therapy may be provided to prevent
the onset or progression of impairment, functional limitation, disability,
or changes in physical function or health resulting from injury,
disease, or other causes. In schools, qualified PTs may:
- provide treatment to increase joint function, muscle strength,
mobility, and endurance;
- address gross motor skills that rely on the large muscles of
the body involved in physical movement and range of motion;
- help improve the student's posture, gait, and body awareness;
and
- monitor the function, fit, and proper use of mobility aids and
devices. [Section 300.24(b)(8)] NICHCY News Digest.
The roles of PTs and other student support services professionals
are articulated in the Connecticut State Department of Education
document Position Statement on Student Support Services (2001).
State Organization
Connecticut
Physical Therapy Association
National Organization
American Physical Therapy Association
Connecticut State Department of Education
Guidelines
for Physical Therapy in Educational Settings (1999).
For more information, please contact:
SERC Consultants: Ruth D. Kirsch, LCSW, Ph.D., (860) 632-1485 (ext.
364) or Donna D. Merritt, Ph.D., CCC, ext. (337) |