The school re-entry was with a seventh grade male who had finished treatment for Burkitt’s Lymphoma and was returning to school in two days. The presentation was to about 100+ seventh and eighth graders at a Catholic junior high school. This was such a special experience and I am incredibly grateful that I got to observe this as an intern. It was great to see the patient take pride in answering questions and helping to present the PowerPoint presentation (as per his developmental age where school-age children show pride in socialization/accomplishments). The students were receptive to the information, were great listeners, and were quite intelligent with their base knowledge/questions regarding the presentation. My personal favorite part of the school re-entry was that the patient was already being treated like a normal boy his age, which was evidenced by the majority of the questions being asked by students revolved around the Lego kits the patient created when hospitalized. An insight that Taryn and I discussed was that these students didn’t ask any questions about death. Taryn informed me that typically, Catholic school students do not ask about death during a school re-entry. In all, this was such an exciting and special experience. Overall, today was a successful and long day! I was able to facilitate a therapeutic and normative play activity and attend a school re-entry. I was
The school re-entry was with a seventh grade male who had finished treatment for Burkitt’s Lymphoma and was returning to school in two days. The presentation was to about 100+ seventh and eighth graders at a Catholic junior high school. This was such a special experience and I am incredibly grateful that I got to observe this as an intern. It was great to see the patient take pride in answering questions and helping to present the PowerPoint presentation (as per his developmental age where school-age children show pride in socialization/accomplishments). The students were receptive to the information, were great listeners, and were quite intelligent with their base knowledge/questions regarding the presentation. My personal favorite part of the school re-entry was that the patient was already being treated like a normal boy his age, which was evidenced by the majority of the questions being asked by students revolved around the Lego kits the patient created when hospitalized. An insight that Taryn and I discussed was that these students didn’t ask any questions about death. Taryn informed me that typically, Catholic school students do not ask about death during a school re-entry. In all, this was such an exciting and special experience. Overall, today was a successful and long day! I was able to facilitate a therapeutic and normative play activity and attend a school re-entry. I was