Description
Hidden Visual Processing Problems: Think Faster, Learn Better, Work Smarter
Vision is more than 20/20 eyesight. Optimal visual processing helps us see more, think faster, and attend longer.
Cathy Stern – Improving Visual Processing at Any Age: Enhance Performance, Learning, & Therapeutic Success
Enhancing visual processing is key to improving learning and performance for school, work, play, and activities of daily living. How can we build up visual processing to learn faster and work smarter? How can we assist those recovering from concussion/brain injury?
This workshop will help you better understand visual processing, allow you to experience the effects of non-sight related vision problems, and introduce you to a program of visual skills testing and visual brain training. The program uses easy-to-learn techniques that you can integrate into your current therapies and use to enhance therapeutic success.
Handouts
Manual – Improving Visual Processing at Any Age (2.20 MB) 40 Pages Available after Purchase
Outline
ESSENTIAL VISUAL SKILLS FOR SCHOOL, WORK, PLAY, AND MORE
Eyesight vs. visual processing?
Our two-track visual system
What is it?
Where is it?
Eye tracking, focus flexibility, and eye coordination skills
Building up visual stability, visual stamina, and speed of processing
VISION DIRECTS ACTION
Can my hands and feet do what my eyes see?
Reduced falls, accidents, and sports injuries
Faster recovery from concussion and brain injury
COMMON FUNCTIONAL VISION DISORDERS
Oculomotor dysfunction
Accommodative instability
EXPERIENCE THE EFFECTS OF IMPERFECT VISUAL SKILLS FOR LEARNING
EXPERIENCE THE IMPACT OF VISUAL PROBLEMS ON EVERYDAY PERFORMANCE
CUTTING-EDGE VISION SCREENING – A HANDS-ON LEARNING OPPORTUNITY
Visual Screening Tools for:
Convergence
Visual tracking
Focus flexibility
Depth perception
Go beyond vision acuity
BENEFITS OF THE MULTIDISCIPLINARY TEAM
How to refer
Who to refer
What they can do for my patient
VISUAL BRAIN TRAINING
Techniques you can apply now!
Ways to enhance visual tracking and convergence
New techniques to improve visual processing and visual integration
Enhancing processing speed, attention, visual memory, and sensory integration
How to apply the concept: Think Faster, Learn Better, Work Smarter
Faculty
Cathy Stern, O.D., FCOVD, FCSO, FNORA
Developmental/Behavioral optometrist
Private Practice
Cathy D. Stern, O.D., FCOVD, FCSO, FNORA is a behavioral optometrist with specialized training for treating learning-related vision problems, computer vision syndrome, neurological vision problems following brain injury or stroke and sports vision training. She has extensive experience working with children and adults with learning problems, ADD/ADHD, dyslexia, cerebral palsy, autism and the multiply challenged. She also works with adults following traumatic brain injury and with athletes of all ages.
Dr. Stern has presented national and international workshops for physicians, optometrists, teachers, psychologists, occupational, physical and speech therapists and other professionals who work with special populations. She is a Fellow in the College of Optometrists in Vision Development (FCOVD), the College of Syntonic Optometry (FCSO) and the Neuro-Optometric Rehabilitation Association (FNORA). Dr. Stern is state director of the College of Optometrists in Vision Development, past vice-president of the College of Syntonic Optometry, Massachusetts key person for the AOA Sports Vision Section and a past reviewer for the Journal of Behavioral Optometry. She recently published the chapter Photophobia, Light and Color in Acquired Brain Injury in Vision Rehabilitation edited by Penelope Suter and Lisa Harvey. Dr. Stern maintains a private practice in Canton, MA limited to vision therapy and vision rehabilitation.
Speaker Disclosures:
Financial: Dr. Cathy Stern maintains a private practice. She is a speaker who receives an honorarium for PESI, Inc. She is a speaker who receives an honorarium for Education Resources Inc. She is an instructor who receives compensation for the College of Syntonic Optometry. Dr. Stern was a contributing editor for Vision Rehabilitation (CRC Press), writing the chapter Photophobia, Light and Color in Acquired Brain Injury.
Non-financial: She is the Massachusetts State Director of the College of Optometrists in Vision Development and receives no compensation.