Testimonials
Conductive Education of Northwest Arkansas
When our daughter, Chloe, was diagnosed with spastic quadriplegia, also called cerebral palsy, we were given the standard advice: therapy, and lots of it. The doctors recommended that we enroll her in a “special needs” preschool as soon as possible so that she could spend most of each day in the care of the experts. So, when Chloe was nine months old, we sent her off to preschool. We soon found out, however, that when it came to Chloe’s particular needs, the people at her school were not exactly experts.
As a parent of an 11 year old that has attended Conductive Education of Northwest Arkansas for two years I am more than pleased with the progress he has made. The program is well rounded and meets both his physical as well as his cognitive needs. He is concurrently enrolled in the Bentonville Public Schools as a 5th grader in a community based education program. The combination of the two programs is well suited for his overall needs and is allowing him to grow cognitively, socially and physically with the ultimate goal of achieving the maximum amount of independence possible.
Our son, Levi David Capper, was born on January 30, 2000. He was three and a half weeks early and still weighed over nine pounds. It was a difficult delivery. He was turned wrong and the doctor was unable to get him turned. Finally after seventeen hours of labor, an emergency C-section was performed. It took the doctors almost ten minutes to revive him after delivery.
The effectiveness of Conductive Education is beyond dispute by those who have seen its results firsthand. We welcome you to review some of the letters and testimonials that we have received over the years. We think that parents are the best judge of the progress that children make when enrolled in a CE program.
The web has many similar pages available – we welcome you to utilize the following listing of links to other Conductive Education Center’s testimonial pages.
Our son, Hunter, was born in August of 2001, 14 weeks premature. At two pounds, three ounces, our bundle of joy struggled each day to live. After 10 weeks in the NICU he was finally big enough and strong enough to leave the hospital. We were beyond excited to finally have him home.