• Auditory Integration Training

    “My 10-year-old child stated after a couple of days into the AIT therapy: ‘The buzzing sound is gone!’. His reading and writing has improved. There has been a great decrease in anxiety.”

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  • Online Sessions

    “I have Rheumatoid Arthritis which is now in remission. I have a new flexibility and sleep very well. This has improved my quality of life.”
    – A 92 year old woman

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  • Neuroplasticity

    According to the ATEC scoring, my son does not qualify anymore for autism. Yes, I agree with Normand Doidge:

    “…many ‘circuits’ and even basic reflexes that we think are hardwired, are not.”
    The Brain That Changes Itself

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  • Assessment

    Analysing modes of physiological brain function and dysfunction

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  • Neurodevelopment Through Movement

    Giving the brain a “second chance” (Sally Goddard)

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  • An Efficient Brain

    Mental and emotional flexibility with stability
    “The constant busyness in my head, the constant shifting of tasks have all but stopped. I can focus more clearly…My listening skills have greatly increased. Highly recommend for anyone young or old.”

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  • Optimal Brain Function

    “NeuroMovement® was an integral part of my healing toolbox that helped me go from the couch with chronic daily pain to hiking a mountain.”

Brain Development

Early Intervention is the key

Is your child learning efficiently?

Is your child ready to learn in school?

Did your child go through these steps?

The central nervous system (the brain) develops step-by-step, at its highest rate from before birth to one-year old and continues at a rapid rate until 7-years old in order to become an efficient learner.
Neurodevelopment Articles

If your child has missed some of these steps … we can give your child a “second chance”.

You can do the Neurodevelopment Through Movement program at home or come to our clinic for an individualized program.

Brain Graph
Step 1: Pons (1-5 months) Crawling on his belly

  • Helps the hands to open out, integrating the grasp reflex (preparing the writing skill)
  • First time the baby moves forward on his own (attention and motivation)
  • Horizontal eye tracking
    (eyes muscles working without the head moving, base for the reading skill)
  • Develops eye muscles to converge
    (2 eyes but one image, preparing to focus later on each letter as he learns to read)
  • Vital tactile perception of his body in space
    (dermatomes on the surface of the skin linking to spinal cord and brain)

Step 2: Midbrain (4-13 months) Creeping on hands and knees

  • Hands open and close to support his body weight (next step development for the writing skill)
  • Eye accommodation: switching from near to far point vision
  • First experience of moving forward with speed
  • Connects vestibular, proprioception and visual systems

Step 3: Cortex (8-72 months) Upright walk with cross-pattern

  • Refining his binocularity
  • Awareness of three dimensions (touch, vision, sound)
  • Cortical opposition of both hands, working together but independantly
  • Inhibition of subcortical reactions
    (controlling impulsivity. leading to be able to simultaneously problem solve while staying calm)

Stage 4: Prefrontal Cortex (6 – 25 years) Refined skills for performance

  • Executive functions: planning, organizing, starting and finishing a project
  • Cognitive and emotional self-regulation
  • Delays gratification for a higher cause
  • Working memory
  • Consolidation of brain laterality


Different manifestations of typical and atypical baby movements.

Typical/Atypical Development Comparisons



Typical/Atypical Development Comparisons Charts

2 Month Comparison Handout
4 Month Comparison Handout
6 Month Comparison Handout

Essential Tummy Time Moves


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Sensory Integration / processing


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