Subject | Age/level and price |
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Ages 1 - 4 - price upon request
Ages 5 - 7 - price upon request
Ages 8 - 11 - price upon request
Ages 12 - 14 - price upon request
Ages 15 - 16 - price upon request
Ages 17 - 18 - price upon request
Ages 19 - 21 - price upon request
Ages 22+ - price upon request
Adult Education - price upon request
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Ages 1 - 4 - price upon request
Ages 5 - 7 - price upon request
Ages 8 - 11 - price upon request
Ages 12 - 14 - price upon request
Ages 15 - 16 - price upon request
Ages 17 - 18 - price upon request
Ages 19 - 21 - price upon request
Ages 22+ - price upon request
Adult Education - price upon request
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Ages 1 - 4 - price upon request
Ages 5 - 7 - price upon request
Ages 8 - 11 - price upon request
Ages 12 - 14 - price upon request
Ages 15 - 16 - price upon request
Ages 17 - 18 - price upon request
Ages 19 - 21 - price upon request
Ages 22+ - price upon request
Adult Education - price upon request
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Ages 1 - 4 - price upon request
Ages 5 - 7 - price upon request
Ages 8 - 11 - price upon request
Ages 12 - 14 - price upon request
Ages 15 - 16 - price upon request
Ages 17 - 18 - price upon request
Ages 19 - 21 - price upon request
Ages 22+ - price upon request
Adult Education - price upon request
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Perceptual difficulties affect not only reading, spelling, maths and handwriting but a whole range of everyday functioning, including self-esteem and behaviour. Research recognises that early learning experiences affect later development and if one stage is missed out or not fully grasped, the future development may be impaired and the individual has to find ways to compensate. The Perceptual Enrichment Programme has been designed to integrate the different stages of perceptual development, to develop neural pathways and to stimulate the frontal processing area of the brain. When a child learns to relate to the world he or she passes through various stages of development, each stage building upon the previous one. Concrete operations such as matching, remembering, recognising familiar shapes in unfamiliar settings, identifying a whole object from it's parts and understanding how shapes relate to each other, are all a basis for understanding increasingly more complex concepts. For example, in order to think in abstract terms, one must have a firm understanding of how parts go together to make a whole, and to categorize, one must be able to observe detail. Initially if a child is unable to see how parts go together to make a whole, or is unable to sequence, he or she may find it difficult to see how letters go together to make words, and how words combine to make sentences. |