Seminar Topics

In-person professional development courses

Whether you're looking for a keynote speaker for your event or a professional development experience for your school, district, agency, clinic, or conference, Cari can deliver an inspiring message to educate and motivate pediatric therapists, educators, leaders, and early childhood professionals. Cari is available to do both in-person and online professional development trainings and has a variety of topics to choose from.

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Autism Strategies and Neurodiversity Affirming Practices in Early Childhood

Autism Strategies and Neurodiversity Affirming Practices in Early Childhood

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Autism Strategies and Neurodiversity Affirming Practices in Education

Autism Strategies and Neurodiversity Affirming Practices in Education

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Assessing and Treating Suspected Apraxia of Speech in Young Children

Assessing and Treating Suspected Apraxia of Speech in Young Children

Making Sense of Sensory

Making Sense of Sensory

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The ABC's of Early Intervention: Best Practice Guidelines Under Part C of IDEA

The ABC's of Early Intervention: Best Practice Guidelines Under Part C of IDEA

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The Nuts and Bolts of Apraxia Therapy

The Nuts and Bolts of Apraxia Therapy

Building Executive Function Skills Through Play-Based Learning

Building Executive Function Skills Through Play-Based Learning

The Power of Play in a High-Tech World

The Power of Play in a High-Tech World

Using Connection and Co-regulation to Address Challenging Behavior in Young Children

Using Connection and Co-regulation to Address Challenging Behavior in Young Children

Autism Strategies and Neurodiversity Affirming Practices in Early Childhood

Join Cari for a full-day training on making the shift to neurodiversity affirming practices. Topics on reframing autism include the following: moving from deficit-driven to strengths-based language in documentation, autism signs in young children under age 5, talking to parents about autism, racial and gender disparities in diagnosing autism, models of disability, understanding neurodiversity, gestalt language development, presuming competence, and so much more! Participants will leave this training with a plan for supporting Autistic toddlers and preschoolers by focusing on goals and strategies to support regulation, connection, and communication. Whether your staff provides services in the home, clinic, or early childhood classroom setting, this course will jump-start their transition to becoming neurodiversity affirming providers.

Audience: This course is designed for early childhood professionals working with the birth to 5 population.

Autism Strategies and Neurodiversity Affirming Practices in Education

This course provides an overview of how to provide strengths-based, neurodiversity-affirming services to Autistic students. The goals and strategies addressed in this course are not focused on establishing compliance or fixing deficits identified on standardized tests, but rather on supporting Autistic students using neurodiversity-affirming accommodations and modifications to help them learn, grow, and thrive as their authentic selves.

Audience: This course is designed specifically for educators, therapists, social workers, psychologists, and administrators working in the K-12 school setting.

Assessing and Treating Suspected Apraxia of Speech in Young Children

This course provides a step-by-step approach for supporting minimally verbal toddlers and preschoolers with suspected childhood apraxia of speech. Cari begins with an overview of apraxia and then systematically moves from assessment to differential diagnosis to therapy approaches, strategies, and activities. This full-day training is packed with clinically relevant information based on the principles of motor learning. SLPs will leave this course with a roadmap for supporting their youngest clients with suspected apraxia of speech.

Audience: This course is designed specifically for pediatric speech-language pathologists working with toddlers and preschoolers.

Making Sense of Sensory

This course provides an overview of the external and internal sensory systems along with observable characteristics of sensory dysregulation. Understanding that sensory input drives motor and behavioral output provides the foundation for this course. The way young children take in, process, and respond to sensory information significantly affects the way they learn, develop, and behave. While occupational therapists are the professionals who specialize in sensory integration therapy, this course is designed for all educators, therapists, and administrators to better understand how to provide a learning environment to support children with sensory processing differences.

Audience: This course is designed for therapists and educators working with toddlers, preschoolers, and early school age children.

The ABC's of Early Intervention: Best Practice Guidelines Under Part C of IDEA

Working with the birth to three population is a rewarding, yet often challenging experience. Community-based services require providers to move from a dyadic model of service delivery to a triadic model, which includes parents and caregivers as integral members of the early intervention team. In this course we will examine the ABCs of early intervention to empower providers with evidence-based strategies when working with very young children and their families. The following topics will be explored: child-centered versus family-centered services, barriers to success in early intervention, parent coaching, writing functional IFSP outcomes, neurodiversity-affirming practices, routines-based intervention, effective services in the childcare setting, and so much more!

Audience: This course is designed specifically for providers serving the birth to 3 population in your state’s Early Intervention program.

The Nuts and Bolts of Apraxia Therapy

A young child arrives on the doorstep of the pediatric speech-language pathologist with a diagnosis of childhood apraxia of speech (CAS). Now what? Establishing an appropriate treatment plan based on the principles of motor learning is essential when treating motor speech disorders. In this course, Cari provides clinically relevant information on apraxia related to goal writing, target selection, therapy strategies, and multi-sensory cueing. She also offers a variety of engaging activities to promote repetitive speech practice for speech-language pathologists working with toddlers, preschoolers, and early school-aged children who have speech motor planning struggles.

Audience: This course is designed specifically for providers serving the birth to 3 population in your state's Early Intervention program.
Note: This course only covers treatment of CAS. If you are interested in assessment and differential diagnosis, please see the 6-hour course listed below.

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