| PEDIATRIC VISION CARE |
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Your Child Have A Learning Related Problem? A large part of learning is done visually Reading, spelling, writing, chalkboard work, and in many schools, computers, are among the tasks students tackle all day long, day after day. Each involves the visual abilities of seeing quickly and understanding visual information frequently less than arm's length from the eyes. Many students' visual abilities just aren't up to the level of the
demands of these types of learning situations in the classroom. Clear eyesight isn't all that's required for these close vision tasks. Youngsters must have a variety of scanning, focusing and visual coordination skills for learning and for getting meaning from reading. If these visual skills have not been developed, or are poorly developed, learning is difficult and stressful, and youngsters typically react in one or a combination of ways:
Behavioral optometrists may help their patients deal with visual stress by prescribing "stress-relieving lenses." These make it much easier for a child or adult to benefit from near vision work. Another fundamental approach is visual training. This is a sequence of activities prescribed by an optometrist in which the child builds visual skills and the ability to efficiently take in, understand and use visual information. |
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have 20/20 eyesight Behavioral optometrists find that many children with learning-related vision problems have 20/20 distance eyesight, but have great difficulty doing vision tasks less than arm's length away. Most school screenings test just the sharpness of distance eyesight, so many vision problems that affect learning go undetected. But parents and teachers can learn to spot learning-related visual problems. Some of these signs are on the following checklist. If a child is continually exhibiting any of these signs, it's time to arrange for a behavioral vision evaluation.
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Signs
of Vision Problems
Eliminating the visual problems that are helping to produce these signs can
quickly pay off in the child's improved school performance.
Here is a link to preventblindness.org that contains vision tests that you can do at home. These tests may help you evaluate your or your childrens' eyesight, but before reaching any conclusions, you should still have your eyes examined by a trained professional here at Family Eye Care of N.E.PA. http://www.preventblindness.org/index.html (*Vision problems do not "cause" learning disabilities. However, poor visual skills, by interfering with the process, can impede remedial efforts. It's like trying to build a house on sand. Good vision skills, on the other hand, can provide a solid foundation for learning.)
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