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Owned by Kath

About Ayres’ theory of sensory integration and processing; a way of understanding peoples’ unique sensory needs for participation in everyday life .

All about Sensory Ladders, Spiders, Trackers and Grids. Tools for home, work and school - making meeting sensory needs everyone’s business.

Memberships

16 contributions to The Sensory Ladders™️ Project
URGENT: Peer and Tutor Groups Microsoft Outage
For the time being, all tutor groups, peer support groups and coffee and chat sessions will move to Zoom because of the current Microsoft Teams issues affecting meeting access and admitting participants. Please give yourself plenty of time before your session to log into My Learning and find the correct Zoom link. Tutor groups:Log into your ASI 1, ASI 2 or ASI 3 learning space. You already have access and do not need to buy anything else. Peer support and coffee and chat:Please access the free product in the shop if you have not already done so. Then log into My Learning and open the group space to find the Zoom link. Please do not share Zoom links on Facebook, social media, WhatsApp groups, school platforms or by email. Everyone must collect their own link from My Learning so we can keep the group safe and prevent unauthorised access. Thank you for your patience while we use Zoom as a temporary solution.
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URGENT:  Peer and Tutor Groups Microsoft Outage
Maternal Mental Health with ICE-ASI
As this is a ICE-ASI Event The link is available via Facebook events here https://fb.me/e/6WkB7iRdo?mibextid=wwXIfr Everyone is welcome to attend. Should be a good one
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Any comments on how to improve this...thoughts?
What Sets Sensory Ladders® Apart from Other Self-Regulation Approaches There is growing interest in tools and approaches that help children, young people and adults understand their feelings, manage distress, and find ways to move through difficult moments. That is a positive shift. It reflects a wider recognition that regulation matters, that lived experience matters, and that support needs to be more thoughtful, more relational, and more respectful. At the same time, not all self-regulation approaches are built in the same way. Some tools are designed around broad categories or stages. They may group experience into colour zones, emotional levels, or expected states, then suggest a matching strategy. These approaches can offer helpful structure, especially when someone is first beginning to notice patterns in their day. They can give adults and teams a shared language. They can also support consistency across home, school, and care settings. But many of these approaches remain adult-defined. They often begin with an external framework and ask the person to fit themselves into it. Sensory Ladders® were developed differently. Sensory Ladders® are not simply a regulation chart, a behaviour support tool, or a list of calming activities. They are a co-produced, person-led way of exploring how sensory experience, arousal, emotion, action, meaning, and participation connect in daily life. They begin not with a category, but with the person. That distinction matters. Starting with the person, not the framework What sets Sensory Ladders® apart most clearly is that they do not ask, “Which box are you in?” They ask, “What is this like for you?” That change in starting point opens up a very different kind of conversation. Rather than reducing experience to fixed labels such as calm, over alert, or dysregulated, Sensory Ladders® make space for the person to describe their own internal world in their own way. For one person, early signs of overload may feel like buzzing skin, muddled thoughts, or needing to move. For another, it may feel like going quiet, losing words, or suddenly needing to leave. For someone else, it may not feel distressing at first at all. It may feel exciting, fast, funny, intense, or confusing.
1 like • Apr 17
@Iona Meadows thank you for your comments... Will adjust
0 likes • 29d
Thank you all - it’s for section in a booklet about Sensory Ladders…
Innovation, Iteration and Co-production - ISIC Poster
We are sharing our ISIC poster alongside this reflection, because it captures something central to Sensory Ladders®: co production is not a slogan. It is how the work was built, and how it continues to grow. Bridging the Gap | From Sensory Motor Processing to Human Occupation with Sensory Ladders® This is one of the posters presented at ISIC: What we mean by co production There are three living layers to this. 1. The concept itself was co produced. Sensory Ladders®️ did not arrive fully formed. They grew organically in collaboration with people using services, families, and clinicians. In learning disability and mental health services, we needed a way to make sensory experience visible in a way that protected dignity and supported participation. People described what overwhelmed felt like. What underpowered felt like. What helped. What made things worse. We trialled versions together. We changed language when it felt reducing. We refined structure when it felt confusing. The framework evolved through feedback, reflection, and active participation. Lived experience shaped the structure as much as theory did. 2. Every individual ladder is co produced. No two Sensory Ladders®️ are the same. Each ladder is created with a person, not for them. The steps are named together. The wording reflects the person’s own language. The levels link directly to real occupations, roles, and environments. The making of the ladder builds shared understanding. It supports agency, reduces misinterpretation, and strengthens relational response. It is not about placing someone into a type. It is about recognising unique patterns and building a shared map that supports meaningful doing. 3. Translation is also co produced. As Sensory Ladders®️ are translated internationally, this is done in collaboration with therapists within each cultural and linguistic context. Translation is not simply about swapping words. It involves: • ensuring metaphors make sense locally
Innovation, Iteration and Co-production - ISIC Poster
0 likes • Mar 16
@Sandra Napper This is exactly as it is… with some LS clients, we use pictures and card sorting to make Ladders and Spiders.
Sensory Ladders History
So Sensory Levels became Sensory Ladders in 2001 - in co-production and collaboration with people with sensory differences. Here is one of the earliest versions - complete with a crocodile and monkey!
Sensory Ladders History
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Kath Smith
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59points to level up
@kath-smith-5901
Supporting neurodiversity and trauma through MSc education, leadership, and over 25 years asvancing Ayres Sensory Integration beyond childhood.

Active 18h ago
Joined Aug 17, 2025
Cornwall,UK
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