Making Therapy Work: Beyond the Weekly Session

Loading player...
In this episode, Lauren Edmunds explains that sending a child to a single weekly therapy session is like doing ten sit-ups on a Friday and expecting a six-pack. She suggests that for therapy to actually "pay off," parents need to view the therapist like a personal trainer; the real results come from doing the exercises at home between sessions. While some tasks like colouring or household chores might seem trivial, Lauren points out that they build the foundational physical skills—like crossing the midline—required for higher-level learning like reading and writing.

To get the most out of this process, Lauren encourages parents to move past the jargon by asking therapists exactly how each activity helps. By incorporating movement—such as climbing trees, swimming, or even helping with the groceries—into daily life, parents help strengthen the brain-body connection in children. Ultimately, these everyday actions provide the "practice" where development actually occurs, making the work done in the therapist's office far more effective.
23 Feb English South Africa Education · Self-Improvement

Other recent episodes

Change One Thing: Parenting, Choice and Consequence

In this episode, Lauren Edmunds explores the powerful link between choice and consequence in parenting. She reflects on how lasting change in children often begins with a shift in our own behaviour, encouraging parents to model positive habits, embrace change, and focus on small, consistent actions that make a meaningful…
23 Apr 4 min

Chipping Away at the Stone

Lauren Edmunds draws on the story of Michelangelo's David to reframe what it really means to support children with learning difficulties and neurodiversity. Rather than trying to mould children into something they are not, she argues that the real work is in removing the barriers that are getting in the…
8 Apr 6 min

Addiction & the Battle for Our Children's Minds

Lauren Edmunds, founder of a school specialising in learning delays, delivers a candid warning about the real cost of unchecked screen time. Drawing from her classroom experience, she makes the case that screen addiction is reshaping how children think, learn, and engage with the world and that the first step…
1 Apr 4 min

The Evening Prescription

In this episode, Lauren Edmunds explains how reclaiming two simple evening habits can reverse the decline in a child's academic and social abilities. By dedicating just 15 minutes to a family dinner and 20 minutes to reading aloud, parents create a "safe space" that fosters the vocabulary, empathy and critical…
25 Mar 3 min