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joincoralcare.com
How to Teach a Child to Ride a Bike: The OT and PT Complete Guide

This is some text inside of a div block.In most cases, yes. Coral Care accepts most major insurance plans across our nine states. Coverage varies by plan and state — contact us and we'll check your benefits before your first session.This is some text inside of a div block.Convenience matters, which is exactly why in-home therapy exists. When a therapist comes to your home, you get everything telehealth promises — no commute, no waiting room, therapy in your child's natural environment, real family involvement — and your child still gets actual therapy. In-home in-person care is not a compromise between convenience and quality. It is both.This is some text inside of a div block.No. The need for physical guidance doesn't diminish as children get older. A seven-year-old working on handwriting, an eight-year-old with feeding challenges, a nine-year-old building fine motor strength — all of them need hands-on intervention. Virtual OT advocates sometimes frame older children as better candidates for telehealth because they can follow instructions. But following instructions and receiving therapy are two different things.This is some text inside of a div block.The honest read is mixed. The clearest post-pandemic data point: when researchers surveyed 132 pediatric OTs after restrictions lifted, the median rate of telehealth use had dropped to just 10% of their services. These are clinicians who did both. When they had a choice, nine out of ten went back in person. That is the research that matters most.This is some text inside of a div block.Mostly, you become the therapist. The OT watches through a camera and directs you — how to move your child's body, what input to provide, how to respond to what you're seeing. That coaching has value. But you were not trained to deliver occupational therapy, you cannot feel what a trained clinician feels, and you are also trying to be the parent at the same time. Research confirms this burden is real — studies found some caregivers reported increased stress and burnout from managing virtual OT sessions. For a child with active therapy goals, this model asks too much of parents and delivers too little to kids.This is some text inside of a div block.Because the work happens through the body, not through a screen. An OT working on handwriting can feel how a child grips a pencil and physically correct their hand position — a camera cannot. An OT working on feeding can assess oral motor function and texture responses up close in wa...

joincoralcare.com
businessinsider.com
I Was Scared to Let My Kids Roam Unsupervised - Business Insider

The author's kids are part of a neighborhood "bike gang." Courtesy of the author 2026-04-12T13:48:02.460Z I started letting my son bike around our neighborhood with his friends when he was 8. He and my daughter now bike up to a half mile away, as long as they're in a group. Letting them bike around has taught them responsibility and independence. The first time my son asked if he could bike in the neighborhood with his friends, I hesitated. His friend balanced on his bike, one foot on the ground, waiting impatiently for an answer. I looked at my eight-year old son, his eyes wide with hope, and every instinct in me wanted to say no. It was too dangerous. He could get hit by a car. Or kidnapped.Instead, I took a breath and said, "You can go one block over. And stick together the whole time."My son pumped his fist in victory, clipped on his helmet, and hopped on his bike. I didn't hear from him for half an hour, during which I worried the whole time. When he returned home, breathless and happy, I knew that I'd made the right choice. He started asking for more screentime when he wasn't outsideI bought him an advanced walkie-talkie and GPS tracker so I could check his whereabouts and communicate with him next time he went.Biking became a regular thing that summer among the four neighborhood boys close in age. Besides biking, they played in our driveway, climbed trees, and made homemade "weapons."After about two years, the "bike gang" started to dissolve. One kid moved away. The oldest lost interest. Eventually, my son stopped biking, too. He stayed indoors more often and rarely ventured outside. Instead of pushing his limits in free play, he started begging for more screen time.I missed the days of the "bike gang," so when one of the neighbor kids and his younger brother started biking again, I was all too ready to let my son — and now my 8-year-old daughter — join in.I set boundaries with my kids on how far they can goI know that biking can be dangerous — my husband was hit on a bike as a kid, so was my little brother, and in my 20's I was hit while jogging. Cars are not always paying attention, especially now with texting. My kids and I talk about how hyper-aware they need to be at all times. We also discuss stranger danger, and my son now has a GPS tracking watch.Still, even with these precautions, it's not easy to send my kids into the world — but the alternative is that they're cooped up inside or limited to our backyard. Our neighborhood "bike gang"...

businessinsider.com
tandfonline.com
A systems perspective on children's outdoor play in a disadvantaged ...

The study engaged children as co-researchers mapping the complex elements and mechanisms that shaped their opportunities and constraints for outdoor play in a Danish disadvantaged area.

tandfonline.com
sciencedaily.com
Parenting News -- ScienceDaily

Latest research on parenting. Everything from infancy through the teen years, including breastfeeding, colic, academic success, behavioral problems, teen relationships and more.

sciencedaily.com