Space Coast LIVING - Giving Back Edition

Page 30

EDUCATION

MAKING A DIFFERENCE, ONE CHILD AT A TIME SPACE COAST EARLY INTERVENTION CENTER

BY ERIC WRIGHT PUBLISHER

Terri Clark Photography by Jason Hook

I

t is a quality that is almost inherent in parenting. Namely, a consuming desire that our children realize their potential and are prepared for all the challenges and opportunities that life has to offer. Wherever our children are on the emotional, intellectual or physical spectrum, no one believes in the possibilities that lie before them, like parents and those special individuals who dedicate their lives to its full realization. For Terri Clark, the executive director of the Space Coast Early Intervention Center, who for 25 years was a Brevard County Public School teacher, it is both personal and professional. While a student at Eau Gallie High, she first began working with developmentally disabled students, then she pursued an undergraduate degree in psychology and a graduate degree in special education. However, what tipped the scale was when she was told her son, who was then in the second grade, would never graduate from high school because he couldn’t learn to read. “I chose not to believe that,” Clark said, “I knew God was the only one who determines my son’s future.” Apparently, she and God knew something others did not see, as today her son has not only graduated from high school, he earned a scholarship to Stetson University, then went on to the University of Florida where he earned his MAB. 2 8: SPAC E COA ST L IV I N G | S PAC ECOA ST L I V I N G .CO M

Clark found a “Brain Trainer” for her son, someone who teaches and coaches children and adults who have atypical learning styles. As she said, “It is like a personal trainer for your brain.” She later opened a business that provided those services for her son and others, before she became the Executive Director at the Early Intervention Center.

A unique learning environment A board member of the Center had a child who was receiving help with Clark’s brain training services and asked her to serve on the board. After two years, when the acting executive director left, she asked to be considered for the position. Her vision and passion had been to run an inclusion school and to expand the Center beyond a pre-school, to an elementary school. Today the Center goes through the third grade. “We are an inclusion school, meaning 50% of our population are developing and fifty percent have some form of a developmental disability,” Clark explained. “We deal with autism, down syndrome, attention deficit, oppositional defiance and physical impairments, as well as exceptional students. We don’t care what the disability is; we develop a program and curriculum that is child centric, versus trying to fit the child into a predetermined curriculum.”


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