Benefits

Benefits

Sound Therapy is an outstanding new technology designed for accessibility, affordability and ease of use. Its potential health benefits are extensive and may include the following effects:

  • New vitality and sense of well being
  • Relief of tiredness and stress
  • Deep relaxation and relief of anxiety
  • Heightened creativity and mental capacity
  • Increased energy, focus and performance
  • Deep, beneficial sleep and an end to insomnia
  • Improved hearing for those with industrial deafness or hearing loss due to aging
  • Relief of tinnitus (ringing in the ears)
  • Better balance and recovery from dizziness or vertigo
  • Improved concentration and learning ability
  • Improved behaviour and communication in children
  • Increased voice quality and vocal range
  • Better communication, relationships and greater family harmony
Gifted Children PDF Print E-mail

Giftedness is traditionally defined as having an IQ higher than 130.  This is manifested as an intellectual capacity beyond that expected for the age of the child.  It also points to having the potential to achieve highly in both childhood and adulthood.

Giftedness may also include a different type of sensory responsiveness. For example, heightened sensitivity to touch, hearing, sight, smell and taste.

The gifted person experiences life events differently to others, and will put their own unique interpretations on life events.  They will have different perceptions of reality and different emotional responses and consequently, are likely to do things differently as well. 

This presents challenges in some situations for children in the school system.

Gifted Children and Sound Therapy

Gifted children, and in fact all children, can benefit from Sound Therapy, which is simply a way of providing added stimulus to develop and increase the resilience of the auditory system. It can be used to improve concentration, creative thinking, language skills, sleep, moods, energy levels, and to reduce stress.

Just as children need the stimulation of physical exercise, somersaults, roundabouts, swings and other coordination challenges, they benefit from the stimulation of the vestibular and auditory systems that Sound Therapy provides.

Gifted children and learning difficulties

Some gifted children learn more easily through other senses other than the auditory sense. Because such children may not learn well in a traditional classroom, they can sometimes perform considerably below their mental age. Therefore these children may be classed as learning disabled, may fall behind in their studies and become disruptive in group situations.

However, such problems may be hard to identify. Gifted children usually develop self taught strategies for circumventing their deficit, so do not always demonstrate the typical characteristics of a learning or sensory integration problem.

In the classroom gifted children who have a sensory processing problem will often use visual clues to determine what is required of them. Such children often understand much of the subject matter taught in class, having already studied it using computers or reference books at home. Therefore teachers may not notice that the child is unable to follow their verbal teaching. Children may become clever at guessing what the teacher wants from their prior learning or other observations. Alternatively they may just withdraw from participation into their own world, or exhibit disruptive behaviour.

Sound Therapy has been found to enhance learning and life adjustment for gifted children in the following ways.

• Processing of auditory information improved
• Processing speed improved
• Accurate sound detection – able to discern just noticeable differences in sounds
• Clarity of speech perception and articulation enhanced
• Discrimination of relevant sound form background noise
• Improved memory for complex sound patterns
• Better attention to sound
• Improved coordination and sensory integration

When Sound Therapy brings about change in the basic auditory pathways, the effect has a flow on effect to the higher neural levels, eventually reaching and improving academic abilities.

Sound Therapy has been found to improve not only auditory processing but also motor coordination, visual perception, visual/motor skills and time order processing.

To learn more about how Sound Therapy can assist children with their learning, refer to Rafaele Joudry’s book, Why Aren’t I Learning?
To read more now, request one of our Free Reports on Sound Therapy and learning.

 

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