Cajal Academy is the world’s first school designed to empower kids with Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome and other hereditary connective tissue disorders to thrive independently, through a research-backed program delivered by an expert team
A recent report by the National Academies of Science, commissioned by the Social Security Administration, finds that hereditary connective tissue disorders like Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome and Marfans can impact children so greatly as to significantly impair their ability to engage in school — leading some 30% to end up on homebound instruction. Where these conditions were once understood as being a musculoskeletal condition that affected the joints, it recognizes that these conditions throw off a kaleidoscope of shifting physiological impacts across multiple body symptoms, with neuropsychiatric affects like anxiety and depression colliding with cognitive impacts like brain fog, language processing problems and more. Worse, it finds that the stressors and demands of school itself can exacerbate these symptoms, further undermining kids’ access to the core skills they need for learning, and to the educational environment itself.
Cajal Academy was founded by an EDS mom, former litigator and social entrepreneur who was determined to create an educational environment free from the triggers that make these conditions worse, and where kids like her own could receive the therapeutic services and specialized instruction they need to learn how to manage all that their complex medical conditions can throw off—so it doesn’t get to stand in the way of who they want to be.
We are proud to provide the world’s first program that is specifically designed to empower children who have connective tissue disorders such as Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (“EDS”) and its common comorbidities, including mast cell activation syndrome, dysautonomia, POTS, hypersensitized central nervous system and more. Our “Zebras Program” sits at the heart of a school for intellectually-gifted and twice exceptional kids. Supporting these children’s needs is baked into the DNA of our school. Our goal is to give children the knowledge they need to understand their own very specific profiles and chart their own path, so they can thrive independently in the future mainstream academic and professional settings of their own choice.
We re-designed school, based on scientific guidance about what kids with connective tissue disorders need
There is no cure for heritable connective tissue disorders. Instead, children must learn how to recognize and avoid their triggers, and how to manage their symptoms as they arise. But with multiple body systems overlapping at once, this can get pretty complicated.
We set aside all assumptions about “how schools work” and created a new approach that minimizes those things that are recognized as exacerbating HDCT symptoms while maximizing those things that interrupt these cycles. And we do this for all our students, so noone feels “different,” and everyone benefits.
Here are some of the ways our program is uniquely-suited to the needs of kids with HDCTs:
We provide specialized instruction in how to monitor and manage complex HDCT symptoms
Many school districts readily offer 504 plans to reduce the negative effects of school-related functions and activities on kids with EDS and other connective tissue disorders — but the National Academies of Sciences Consensus Report (which was commissioned by the Social Security Administration) says that patients with these conditions need specialized instruction in how to monitor and manage their complex medical conditions. These include, “education about posture, body mechanics, ergonomics, joint protection, trigger point management, pain self-management (pain neuroscience, physiological quieting, biofeedback, self-care), POTS self-care, MCAS self-care.”
This instruction is delivered by our licensed physical and occupational therapists. Additional expertise in how to identify the learning impacts of symptoms as they arise is provided by our neuropsychologist, based on his extensive clinical and research expertise with kids having autonomic nervous system regulatory challenges. This is supported by coaching in how to ‘parse’ out overlapping symptoms and select a strategy to help reverse them. Meanwhile, all classroom teachers are cross-trained in how to recognize symptoms of POTS, pain, brain fog and more, and appropriate ways to prompt students to make the adjustments they need to resume learning.
At Cajal, we customize this instruction and support for each child—because we know how variable connective tissue disorders can be. In general, these include:
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We integrate expert, multi-disciplinary therapeutic services into the school day to maximize learning, reduce symptoms — and give them time after school to be kids
All students receive a balanced mix of services from licensed therapists who have specific expertise in the safety precautions, therapeutic techniques and life-lived experiences of kids with HDCTs.
We offer HDCT kids the rare gift of learning alongside other kids like themselves, wtihin a broader community of bright and gifted kids that “get it”
Growing up with a symptomatic HDCT can be incredibly socially-isolating, and can leave you wondering if you’re “the only one.” Having the opportunity to learn together with other kids who share your unique medical profile can be transformative for these kids, and builds the emotional resilience they need to withstand what their bodies throw their way.
But that doesn’t mean going into a “bubble.” Our Zebras Program was established as a “school within a school,” with a broader cohort of bright and gifted kids who have special education needs. We teach all our students the neurophysiology they need to understand their own unique profiles and those of their peers, fostering a culture of scientifically-informed empathy. Along the way, this provides organic opportunities for medically-complex kids to develop a comfort level and vocabulary to communicate and advocate for their differences with others who do not share their life-lived experiences.
We integrate all of this within standards-based academics made interesting enough to be worth the effort that school requires from HDCT kids
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.
All our students, regardless of profile, participate in our standards-based, project-based learning curriculum, differentiated for their ability levels and learning profiles. Key highlights include:
Inquiry-based, collaborative project-based learning to give academic topics relevance and purpose for kids who have enough on their plate just managing their own bodies
Highly-individualized programs differentiated to deliver content through their strongest cognitive skills while strategically targeting any learning disabilities, physio challenges and other challenge areas that hold them back
OT-designed, kinesthetic curriculum that leverages the body as a powerful learning modality, while maintaining body regulation and controlling for fatigue, muscle cramping, sensory processing challenges, joint precautions and other musculoskelatal complications
Remote instruction options when fatigue, immunological instability and other chronic conditions interfere with their ability to engage on a consistent academic schedule, integrated into our broader cohort through in-classroom video conferencing, flexible scheduling and video recorded class sessions