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Pioneering program empowers medically-complex kids

Our first-of-its-kind school was built to empower kids with complex medical conditions to reclaim their own course.

(We let other kids get the benefit of it too!)

Cajal Academy is proud to offer a 1st-of-its-kind program empowering students who have complex medical conditions through strategies, interventions and coaching to help them learn how to manage their own medical conditions within educational and occupational settings. This includes diagnoses such as Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, other connective tissue disorders, dysautonomia/POTS, chronic fatigue syndrome, hypermobility syndrome, mast cell activation syndrome and more.

Our program combines highly-personalized academic programs in which students collaborate together with their peers to solve real world problems on the one hand, and expert therapies and coaching in how to independently manage the complicated and changing impacts of each student’s medical conditions on the other. Our academic programs are designed to give these kids the exciting and purposeful learning that is tailored to their academic and social-emotional needs. Because we know first hand that growing up with chronic medical conditions is hard enough, and kids shouldn’t have to do it alone.

 

A school created by a mom with complex medical needs to empower kids like her own to thrive

Cajal Academy is fueled by our co-founder’s passion to create a school where kids with complex medical profiles could get the challenging academic programs they need to chart their own course, alongside the strategies and scientific understandings that kids like her own need to thrive independently along the way.

The World’s 1st School for Students with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome / Connective Tissue Disorders

Find out about our first-of-its-kind program combining the specialized instruction, expert services and OT-designed setting that kids with hereditary connective tissue disorders need to take charge of their challenging medical profiles

 

From Medical Crisis to the College of his Dreams

Read the inspiring story of Cajal Academy’s 1st graduate, and how our program empowered him to overcome an existential threat level medical crisis and the executive function, learning and social-emotional that came with it — and go on to study architecture at one of the top schools in the field.

 
 

 

Empowerment.

We are committed to fostering our students’ identities as scholars, athletes and future thought-leaders—not “patients.”

Our academic program is an important part of our commitment to supporting children who have complex medical needs not as “patients” but as scholars, athletes, artists and future thought leaders. As a former litigator with a top 5 U.S. law firm, our Head of School models for the children that having complex medical needs like the ones that Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome can create doesn’t have to stand in the way of going to a competitive college or graduate school, or from achieving your dreams. We are passionate that no student should have to choose between intellectually-stimulating academic programs to prepare them for the futures of their choice and the therapeutic supports they need to learn how to thrive independently once they get there—whatever challenges their bodies may throw their way.

Here are some of the components that go into our approach:

 

Learning with peers, through academic programs tailored to make sure medical needs don’t hold you back

It’s easy for school to feel irrelevant when your struggling to surf through the changing impacts of a medical condition on your day-to-day. All students benefit when academic instruction is tied to its real world applications; for kids distracted by managing what their bodies throw their way, this can be a lifeline.

Our academic programs are specifically-designed to give “no ceiling” learning for students with high analytical thinking skills, through collaborative “deep dives” into real world problems. Each child’s academic instruction is differentiated according to their neuropsychological and physiological needs, and instructors are trained to flexibly adapt instruction in response to the shifting availability experienced by kids with many chronic medical conditions.

 
A boy looks into the distance in an occupational therapy gym

Customized coaching and services to help medically-complex kids take charge of being themselves

We work with each child and with your medical experts to understand how their conditions impact their day-to-day and learning experiences, and develop strategies they can use to self-monitor, self-manage and self-advocate for needs such as dysautonomia, chronic pain and fatigue, immunological reactions and more. OT, PT and psychological counseling are all tailored to this child’s unique needs, with medical-level expertise integrated into the school program itself so kids are free to be kids after school.

 

Break-through interventions reducing learning disabilities

In order to truly empower kids with complex medical conditions to thrive academically and socially, we must recognize that there medical conditions are but one part of broader psycho-educational profile, which may also include learning, sensory processing, social-emotional and other needs. In fact, we’ve found that the one tend to go hand in hand with the other. Find out how we identify and address ADHD, dyslexia, dyspraxia and other aspects of the broader educational and psycho-social needs of our bright and gifted cohort.

 

Scientific expertise embedded inside a school

Cajal Academy was co-founded by a licensed occupational therapist, and our team was specifically-selected for their expertise in appreciating the impacts of hidden medical events on learning and social-emotional availability.

Our Director of Programs is Steven Mattis, PhD, ABPP: an internationally-recognized neuropsychologist with expertise in which hidden neurophysiological events can impact a child’s cognitive, social and emotional regulation, and the impact of chronic pain, fatigue and the trauma that can be caused by ongoing medical events on a child’s social-emotional development.

 

Social-emotional coaching and support for the challenges of growing up with chronic medical conditions

The very nature of growing up with a chronic medical condition that impairs your quality of life can be very isolating for kids. Even kids who are able to participate in a full range of extra-curricular activities may feel alone as they manage internal symptoms, anxieties about their conditions and/or medical treatments that aren’t shared by their peers or reflected in the culture around them. Our on-staff, PhD-level psychologist helps kids with chronic conditions develop the resilience they need to withstand whatever their medical conditions may have in store.

 

“Human 101” curriculum customized to help each learner understand the science behind their conditions and the strategies they can use to manage them

Teaching kids with chronic medical conditions the science behind their conditions helps them to understand their unique life-lived experiences, reduces their anxieties and helps them appreciate that it’s “just science”—not a character flaw. It also helps them to understand where they need to self-advocate for their differences, and a vocabulary with which to do so, and fosters an authentic growth mindset and the formation of a positive and empowered identity.

These principles guide “Human 101,” our customized health sciences curriculum. Specific content is selected based on the diagnoses within our cohort, leveraging the curriculum as a framework with which to present the science our students need to understand not just their own medical differences, but those of their peers.

Customized coaching & physio supports to help medically-complex kids take charge of being YOU

 

School is about more than learning to read and write, it’s about learning how to excel as a human. For kids with complex medical profiles or atypical neurological development, this is even more salient—and it requires a higher level of expertise. For students in our Zebra Program, our goal is to develop self-management strategies and educational supports to help each child minimize the impact of their medical conditions on their learning, social and emotional experiences to the extent possible, giving them agency over their life-lived experiences. This is a multi-pronged, comprehensive approach implemented through deep collaboration across our academic and clinical teams, in conjunction with the child’s family and medical experts. Here is a look at the several inter-related pieces and how they fit together.

 
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Strategies & coaching to self-monitor, self-manage & self-advocate for your needs

We’ll work with your child's medical team to understand their diagnosis and how they impact your child’s academic and social-emotional experiences. From this, we develop protocols and supports are integrated to mitigate those effects, by working the science behind them.

As we identify which interventions seem to be the most effective for a given child, we evolve these into personalized strategies that the child can use to self-monitor, self-manage and self advocate for their needs, so that they can thrive independently across a range of mainstream settings and activities. Coaching in how to use these strategies is integrated into every aspect of our program, and all staff members are trained in how to recognize medically-triggered dysregulation and cue their management strategies.

 

Physio supports integrated into instruction through OT-designed,“Body-Informed Learning”

We bring our students’ personalized strategies out of the OT gym and embed them directly into academic instruction itself, through our exclusive, OT-designed “Body-Informed Learning.” This unique pedagogy uses movement, rhythm and games, personalized to each child’s physio profile, to deliver academic content. Bringing these strategies directly into instruction reduces the need to take breaks for re-regulation, leverages the body as a powerful learning modality, and models for our medically-complex students strategies that they can employ themselves to care for their bodies while enhancing their learning, rather than letting their body needs stand in the way.

This kinesthetic pedagogical approach is supported by recent findings in the area of “embodied cognition,” that when we pair learning activities with motor and sensory input, we deepen children’s engagement and retention of the material. This can be particularly powerful for children who have inefficient neurovascular systems, sensory processing disorder, chronic muscle cramping and fatigue and similar medical challenges. For these children, regular and strategically-designed neurovascular stimulation can dramatically increase cognitive availability through increased cerebral blood flow, reduced pain, neurochemical re-regulation and more.

We bring this same expertise into all of our physical education instruction as well. Each morning starts with a “body wakeup” taught by our OT & PT staff, preparing their bodies and minds for the day while integrating instruction in how to read and address variable body needs. Our physio experts also teach our gym class, providing adaptive sports and real-time, expert modifications to manage physio differences and address therapeutic needs. This increases the amount of direct physical and occupational therapy services our students receive, without the social isolation or academic disruption of ‘pull out’ therapeutic services.

 

 

Bringing it all together through an expertised, trauma-informed approach

All of these physio, social-emotional and academic elements come together through our trauma-informed behavioral approach. Drawing on our team’s deep knowledge of both learning differences and the connections between children’s hidden neurophysiological events and their social, emotional and learning experiences, we appreciate that children’s behaviors are really just manifestations of the problems they need our help to solve. Rather than a consequentialist approach, we respond to these behaviors by partnering with the child in the moment to help them return to feeling safe and supported, and then to identify together the physical sensations, emotional triggers, academic anxieties and other internal events that had immediately preceded their dysregulation.

This approach is important to meeting the needs of kids with complex medical conditions, for whom the symptoms themselves may act as recurring traumas, even without the added trauma of conditions that progressively increase over time. This is additionally critical for children with connective tissue disorders and other chronic conditions in which the central nervous system becomes overloaded by the panoply of physiologically- (as opposed to psychologically-) driven somatosensory inputs. Recent research with the Ehlers-Danlos population indicates that this constant barrage of neurological signals disrupts the physiological state of homeostasis, throwing the child into a physiologically-driven survival mode, triggering the “freeze, fight or flight” reaction that is also common in trauma. Similar effects can occur with mast cell activation syndrome, due to the interactions between MCAS-driven neurochemical releases, the functioning of the nervous system and, some research indicates, even focal inflammatory responses within the brain itself.

Needless to say, each of these physiological chain reactions can greatly impact a child’s behavior, and yet none of them is “behavioral” in nature. ABA or consequentialist systems are insufficient and can in fact be harmful for these kids, as the relevant triggering events are by definition hidden, and the behaviors are physiologically- rather than consciously controlled. Systems relying on ‘carrots and sticks’ to encourage the child to control these behaviors serve only to increase shame over their differences, while failing to neurologically prepare them to better control the outcomes in the future.

More to the point, when we do understand the biological events driving these behaviors, it is possible to teach children strategies they can use to interrupt those processes, replacing shame with a feeling of agency and empowerment. To do this, we work with each child individually to help them understand these internal chain reactions at an age-appropriate level, and then when responding to behavioral outbursts we model for them a process of monitoring for physiological “tells” or triggers they may have experienced right before. Together, we help them to identify the physical “reactions” that ensued internally, and then to distinguish those reactions from their consciously-controlled “responses” thereto. Over time, children learn that they have a “moment of choice” to choose a more socially-acceptable response, become more adept at predicting and avoiding triggers proactively, and gain increasing agency over the autonomic reactions themselves, through their personalized self-regulation strategies.

Admissions & Tuition

Admissions Criteria

Our Zebra Program is designed as a fluid school within a school. All Zebra Program students are fully-integrated academically and socially with the other students in our program, and our grouped together where there are opportunities to build their sense of kinship and support through, for example, specialized social groups or OT & PT sessions to address hypermobility or other specialized conditions.

As a result, Zebra Program applicants must meet our broader admissions criteria. Specifically, all applicants to our program have verbal reasoning skills in the “very high” to “superior” range. This is important for accessing our curriculum, which relies heavily on recruiting our students’ analytical reasoning skills to give them agency over their medical and life-lived experiences. Cajal Academy is the only special education school in Connecticut or in Westchester County, NY that is specifically-designed to meet the needs of twice exceptional kids, however we do not rely on full scale IQ or prior identification as ‘gifted’ in our admissions criteria.

Cajal Academy does not make medical diagnoses. However, students having either formal diagnoses or common manifestations of connective tissue disorders, dysautonomia/POTS, mast cell activation syndrome, joint hypermobility, chronic pain or fatigue, sleep disturbance and/or other complex medical profiles will be enrolled automatically in our Zebra Program, to ensure that they receive the proper educational supports. All applicants should note these and other areas of specific need or concern on our application, and discuss them during our admissions process. Please don’t be shy about this: we specifically designed Cajal Academy to meet the needs of kids who are “complicated” and want to be sure we understand your child’s programming needs!