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What to Do When Your Child Is Struggling in School

What to Do When Your Child Is Struggling in School

Maybe your child’s grades have started slipping.

Maybe homework takes hours, even when the assignment seems simple. Perhaps your child is becoming frustrated, avoiding schoolwork, or saying things like, “I’m just not good at this.”

It can be difficult to know what to do next.

Should you wait and see if things improve? Contact the teacher? Hire a tutor? Request an educational assessment? Could the difficulty be connected to attention, reading, language, handwriting, anxiety, or another area?

When a child is struggling in school, the most important first step is not immediately choosing a service.

It is slowing down long enough to understand what the child is experiencing and what type of support they may actually need.

Signs Your Child May Be Struggling Academically

Not every academic concern shows up as a failing grade.

Some children work extremely hard to maintain average grades. Others hold their emotions together at school and fall apart once they get home. A child may appear to be doing well in one subject while missing foundational skills that become more noticeable as schoolwork becomes more difficult.

Signs that your child may need additional academic support can include:

  • Homework regularly takes much longer than expected
  • Your child needs an adult beside them for nearly every assignment
  • Grades or test scores have started declining
  • Your child avoids reading, writing, spelling, or math
  • They frequently forget assignments, directions, or materials
  • They understand information when it is explained verbally but struggle to complete written work
  • They have difficulty remembering skills that were previously taught
  • They guess at unfamiliar words instead of sounding them out
  • They become tearful, angry, or shut down during schoolwork
  • They say they are bad at school or unable to learn
  • Teachers report concerns about attention, work completion, or academic progress
  • Your child is working hard but still not making the expected progress

One difficult week does not necessarily mean that a child has a learning problem. However, when the same patterns continue, it is worth looking more closely.

Begin by Talking With Your Child

Children do not always have the words to explain why school feels difficult.

A child may say, “I hate reading,” when reading feels slow and exhausting.

They may say, “Math is boring,” when they are embarrassed that other students seem to understand the lesson more quickly.

They may refuse to complete homework because they do not know where to begin.

Try approaching the conversation with curiosity rather than correction.

You might ask:

  • What part of school feels easiest right now?
  • What part feels the hardest?
  • Is there a time during the day when you feel confused or worried?
  • What happens when you do not understand something?
  • Do you feel comfortable asking your teacher for help?
  • What helps you learn something new?
  • Is the work too difficult, too long, or hard to organize?

The goal is not to interrogate your child or solve everything in one conversation.

It is to let them know that you see their struggle, you believe them, and you are going to help them find a better path forward.

Talk With the Teacher and Ask Specific Questions

Your child’s teacher can provide important information about what is happening in the classroom.

Instead of only asking, “How is my child doing?” ask questions that may reveal more specific patterns.

Consider asking:

  • Is my child struggling in one subject or several?
  • Are they working at grade level?
  • Do they understand lessons during instruction?
  • Can they complete work independently?
  • Do they need frequent reminders or individual assistance?
  • Are they finishing assignments within the expected amount of time?
  • How do they perform on tests compared with everyday classwork?
  • Are there specific skills they appear to be missing?
  • What interventions or strategies have already been tried?
  • Does my child’s classroom performance match what you are seeing in their grades?

A child can perform differently at school than they do at home or during tutoring. The teacher’s observations are one important part of the overall picture.

Identify What Kind of Support Your Child Needs

Not all academic support is the same.

Understanding the difference between services can help families avoid spending time and money on an option that does not address the actual problem.

Homework Support

Homework support focuses on helping a child understand directions, organize assignments, complete current schoolwork, and stay accountable.

This may be helpful when a child generally understands the material but struggles with organization, attention, motivation, or completing work independently.

Individual Tutoring

Individual tutoring focuses on building academic skills and addressing learning gaps.

A tutor may reteach concepts, strengthen foundational skills, provide additional practice, or explain information in a different way.

Tutoring may be appropriate when a child consistently struggles with reading, writing, spelling, math, study skills, or another academic area.

Specialized Reading or Dyslexia Support

Some children need more than general reading practice.

Children with persistent difficulty in phonics, decoding, spelling, fluency, or written language may benefit from structured and explicit reading instruction.

Carolina Therapy Connection provides Orton Gillingham reading support for students with dyslexia, reading difficulties, spelling challenges, and other language based learning differences.

Educational Assessment

An educational assessment may help identify a child’s current academic strengths, areas of difficulty, and the specific skills that need support.

Assessment may be helpful when:

  • The reason for the struggle is unclear
  • Concerns affect several academic areas
  • Tutoring has not produced the expected progress
  • School performance does not seem consistent with the child’s abilities
  • The child performs well verbally but struggles with written work
  • Parents and teachers are seeing different patterns
  • The family needs more information before creating an intervention plan

Not every child needs a comprehensive educational assessment before beginning tutoring. Sometimes a consultation, review of schoolwork, or informal skill measure provides enough information to begin.

When Should You Consider Hiring a Tutor?

Tutoring is not only for children who are failing a class.

Early support can prevent a smaller learning gap from becoming more difficult to address later.

A tutor may be helpful when:

  • Your child continues to struggle despite extra help at school
  • Homework has become a nightly source of conflict
  • Your child has lost confidence
  • Foundational skills appear weak
  • Your child needs more repetition than the classroom can provide
  • They benefit from information being explained in a different way
  • They need help developing organization, study, or test taking skills
  • They are preparing for a transition to a more demanding grade level
  • They need enrichment or additional academic challenge

The right tutor should not simply help a child finish worksheets.

Tutoring should help the child understand concepts, build independence, and begin to see themselves as capable of learning.

Why a Collaborative Approach Matters

No single adult sees every part of a child’s learning experience.

Parents see homework struggles, emotional reactions, and how much support is needed at home.

Teachers see classroom performance, grade level expectations, group participation, and how independently the child completes work.

Tutors have the opportunity to slow down, observe patterns, and provide individualized instruction.

When appropriate and with parent permission, other professionals may also contribute valuable information.

For example:

  • A speech language pathologist may recognize language or comprehension difficulties affecting academic work
  • An occupational therapist may identify handwriting, fine motor, sensory, or executive functioning concerns
  • A mental wellness professional may help address school anxiety, confidence, or emotional regulation
  • A reading specialist may identify decoding, spelling, or fluency patterns

The purpose of collaboration is not to make the child’s support system more complicated.

It is to help the adults around the child understand what is happening and work toward consistent goals.

What Effective Collaboration Looks Like

Good collaboration does not require constant meetings or lengthy emails.

It can be simple, focused, and practical.

Sharing Relevant Information

Parents may choose to share:

  • Report cards
  • Teacher comments
  • Recent assessments
  • Individualized Education Programs or 504 Plans
  • Work samples
  • Previous evaluations
  • Information about homework patterns
  • Strategies that have or have not worked

This gives the tutor or educational specialist a better starting point.

Creating Specific Goals

A goal such as “improve reading” is too broad to guide effective instruction.

A more specific goal may include:

  • Improving decoding of unfamiliar words
  • Increasing reading fluency
  • Strengthening reading comprehension
  • Learning spelling patterns
  • Improving math fact recall
  • Organizing written responses
  • Completing assignments more independently

Specific goals make it easier to plan instruction and measure progress.

Using Consistent Strategies

Children can become confused when every adult uses completely different language or methods.

A tutor does not need to copy the classroom lesson exactly. However, understanding the strategies being used at school can help the tutor reinforce important concepts while filling in missing skills.

Consistency may also help the child use a successful strategy in more than one setting.

Providing Practical Updates

Parents do not need a lengthy report after every session.

A useful tutoring update may include:

  • What the child worked on
  • What they did well
  • Where they needed support
  • Which strategy helped
  • What can be reinforced at home
  • Whether the tutoring plan should be adjusted

The best communication is clear, useful, and focused on helping the child move forward.

Could Something Other Than Academics Be Affecting School Performance?

Sometimes a child understands the academic material but struggles with the skills required to show what they know.

School performance may also be affected by:

  • Attention
  • Executive functioning
  • Language processing
  • Handwriting or fine motor skills
  • Sensory regulation
  • Anxiety
  • Sleep
  • Vision or hearing concerns
  • Difficulty with transitions
  • Low confidence
  • Fear of making mistakes

This does not mean that every child who struggles academically needs therapy or a diagnosis.

It means that looking at the whole child can help families avoid assuming the problem is laziness or lack of effort.

For example, a child may know the answer but struggle to organize it into a written paragraph. Another child may understand math but be unable to read the word problem independently. A third child may know the material at home but become overwhelmed during tests.

Understanding the reason behind the difficulty helps families choose the right support.

What Parents Can Do at Home

While you are gathering information and deciding on next steps, there are several things you can do to support your child.

Protect Their Confidence

Avoid describing your child as lazy, careless, or unmotivated.

Children often internalize these descriptions. Once a child begins believing they are bad at school, they may stop trying because trying feels too risky.

Instead, say:

“This is difficult right now, but we are going to figure out what kind of help you need.”

Break Work Into Smaller Steps

Large assignments can feel overwhelming.

Help your child identify the first step instead of focusing on the entire task.

For example:

“Let’s open your folder.”

“Let’s read the directions together.”

“Let’s complete the first three problems.”

Small steps can reduce anxiety and create momentum.

Create a Predictable Routine

Choose a consistent homework time and location.

Some children need a snack, movement, or quiet time before beginning. Others work best when they complete assignments immediately after school.

The best routine is one that works for your child and can be followed consistently.

Communicate Honestly With the Teacher

When homework takes an unreasonable amount of time, let the teacher know.

A simple note explaining how long the assignment took, how much assistance was needed, and where the child became stuck can provide important information.

Know When to Pause

There is a difference between encouraging perseverance and continuing an interaction that is no longer productive.

When a child is highly upset, learning is unlikely to happen effectively. Take a brief pause, help everyone calm down, and return to the assignment when possible.

How Carolina Therapy Connection Supports Children Who Are Struggling in School

Carolina Therapy Connection provides personalized educational support for children and teens in Greenville and New Bern, North Carolina.

Educational services may include:

  • Individual tutoring
  • Homework and academic support
  • Reading, writing, spelling, and math instruction
  • Orton Gillingham reading support
  • Dyslexia support
  • Study skills and organization
  • Test taking strategies
  • Educational consultations
  • Educational assessments
  • Homeschool support
  • Collaboration with families and teachers, with parent permission

Our tutors use individualized instruction, hands on learning activities, visual supports, and educational tools to help children remain engaged while building skills and confidence.

Because Carolina Therapy Connection also provides occupational therapy, speech therapy, physical therapy, and mental wellness services, families can access additional support when those services are appropriate.

Educational services and therapy services remain separate. However, with parent permission, communication among professionals may help create a clearer understanding of the child’s strengths and needs.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does my child need a tutor if they are not failing?

No.

A child may benefit from tutoring to strengthen foundational skills, improve confidence, prepare for more advanced work, develop study skills, or prevent a learning gap from becoming larger.

How do I know whether my child needs tutoring or an educational assessment?

Tutoring may be a good place to begin when the area of difficulty is clear.

An educational assessment may be helpful when the reason for the struggle is unclear, several academic areas are affected, or previous support has not resulted in expected progress.

Can a tutor communicate with my child’s teacher?

Communication may be possible with written parent or guardian permission and according to the teacher or school’s communication procedures.

What if my child refuses tutoring?

Children may resist tutoring because they feel embarrassed, overwhelmed, or worried that it will be more schoolwork.

Explain that tutoring is not a punishment. It is an opportunity to work with someone individually, ask questions, and learn in a way that may feel easier.

The right tutoring relationship should help the child feel supported rather than judged.

How long does tutoring take to work?

Progress depends on the child’s needs, the skills being addressed, the frequency of sessions, and whether the child can use those skills in other settings.

Families should expect regular communication about goals, progress, and whether the tutoring plan needs to be adjusted.

Your Child Is More Than Their Grades

Watching your child struggle can be painful, especially when you know they are trying.

But difficulty in school does not mean that a child is incapable, lazy, or destined to fall behind.

Sometimes children need more time.

Sometimes they need a different explanation.

Sometimes they need direct instruction in a missing skill.

Sometimes they need the adults around them to compare what they are seeing and work together.

The right support can improve academic performance, but it can also restore something just as important…a child’s confidence and belief that they are capable of learning.

Ready to Find the Right Support for Your Child?

Carolina Therapy Connection offers personalized tutoring, homework support, educational consultations, educational assessments, Orton Gillingham reading support, and homeschool support in Greenville and New Bern, North Carolina.

Explore Educational Services

Submit an Educational Services Inquiry

Learn About Educational Assessments

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One-on-One Tutoring vs. Homework Support

How to Help a Child Who Is Frustrated With Homework

One-on-One Tutoring vs. Homework Help: What Does Your Child Really Need?

One-on-One Tutoring vs. Homework Help: What Does Your Child Really Need?

Written by Becky Taylor, Education Specialist

Your child sits down to complete homework, but within minutes, everyone is frustrated.

Maybe the assignment takes far longer than it should. Maybe your child understands the material one day but seems to forget it the next. Perhaps they need you beside them for every question, or you have started wondering whether they are missing important foundational skills.

Many parents find themselves asking the same question:

Does my child need tutoring, homework help, virtual learning support, or a more complete educational assessment?

Although these services can overlap, they are not quite the same. Understanding the difference can help you choose the kind of support that will truly move your child forward.

What Is One-on-One Tutoring?

One-on-one tutoring is individualized instruction designed around a child’s specific strengths, needs, and academic goals.

Rather than simply helping a student finish tonight’s assignment, a tutor looks at the skills underneath the assignment. The goal is to understand what the child already knows, identify where learning may have broken down, and provide direct instruction to help close those gaps.

For example, a child struggling with reading comprehension may actually have difficulty with decoding, vocabulary, fluency, attention, or recalling what they have read. A child struggling with long division may need additional help with multiplication facts, place value, or sequencing the steps of a problem.

Personalized tutoring allows the educator to slow down, teach concepts in a different way, and give the student enough practice to build both competence and confidence.

Homework support helps a child complete an assignment. Personalized tutoring helps a child develop the skills needed to complete future assignments more independently.

What Is Homework or Virtual Learning Support?

Homework and virtual learning support are typically focused on the work a child has already been assigned by a classroom teacher, online school, homeschool curriculum, or educational program.

This type of support may include:

  • Reviewing directions and assignments
  • Helping a student organize their work
  • Creating a plan for completing multiple assignments
  • Clarifying instructions
  • Helping the student stay focused and motivated
  • Reinforcing material that has already been taught
  • Supporting time management and study habits
  • Navigating online learning platforms

Homework support can be extremely helpful for a child who understands the material but struggles with organization, attention, confidence, or completing work independently.

However, when a child repeatedly struggles with the same academic skills, assignment support alone may not address the underlying issue.

Tutoring or Homework Support: What Is the Difference?

Type of support Main goal May be a good fit when
One-on-one tutoring Build academic skills and close learning gaps Your child consistently struggles with reading, writing, spelling, math, or another academic area
Homework support Complete and understand current assignments Your child generally understands the material but needs help staying organized or following through
Virtual learning support Manage online coursework and learning platforms Your child needs structure, accountability, clarification, or assistance navigating virtual instruction
Educational assessment Identify strengths, challenges, and current academic skill levels You are unsure why your child is struggling or which skills should be addressed first

In some cases, a student may benefit from a combination of services. A child can receive targeted tutoring while also learning better organization, study, and homework completion strategies.

Signs Your Child May Benefit From One-on-One Tutoring

Not every child who receives tutoring is failing a class. Tutoring can also provide early support before a small challenge becomes a much larger one.

One-on-one tutoring may be helpful when your child:

  • Continues to struggle with the same concepts despite repeated practice
  • Avoids reading, writing, spelling, or math activities
  • Becomes unusually upset or anxious during homework
  • Takes much longer than expected to complete assignments
  • Has difficulty remembering previously taught material
  • Guesses at words instead of sounding them out
  • Struggles to read smoothly or explain what they have read
  • Has difficulty organizing thoughts in writing
  • Understands math concepts verbally but struggles to complete written problems
  • Is losing confidence or beginning to believe they are “bad” at school
  • Has academic skills that appear significantly different from their overall abilities
  • Needs more individualized instruction than can reasonably be provided in a busy classroom

A child’s frustration is often communication. It may be their way of saying, “I do not understand this yet,” or, “The way this is being taught is not working for me.”

The right tutor does more than repeat the same lesson. They find another way to help the child understand it.

When Should Parents Consider an Educational Assessment?

Sometimes parents know their child is struggling, but they are not sure why.

An educational assessment can help identify a student’s current academic strengths, areas of difficulty, and specific skills that may need additional instruction. At Carolina Therapy Connection, assessments may include formal testing, informal observations, academic inventories, checklists, and a review of how the child approaches learning and problem solving.

An assessment may be worth considering when:

  • Tutoring has not resulted in the progress you expected
  • Your child’s difficulties appear in more than one academic area
  • Teachers and parents are seeing different patterns
  • Your child performs well verbally but struggles with written work
  • You need more information before creating a tutoring plan
  • Your child has a history of developmental, attention, language, or learning concerns
  • You suspect a reading or language-based learning difficulty and need help identifying the most appropriate next steps
  • You want a clearer understanding of your child’s academic functioning

An educational assessment of academic achievement can provide valuable information about a child’s current skill levels and learning needs, but it is not the same as a medical, psychological, or school-based diagnostic evaluation.

Personalized Reading and Dyslexia Support

Some children need more than general reading practice. They may need explicit instruction in phonics, decoding, spelling patterns, fluency, and written language.

Carolina Therapy Connection offers specialized Orton Gillingham reading support in Greenville and New Bern for children with dyslexia, reading difficulties, spelling challenges, and other language based learning differences.

The Orton Gillingham approach uses direct, structured, sequential, and multisensory instruction to build reading and spelling skills step by step.

This type of instruction may be helpful for children who:

  • Have difficulty sounding out unfamiliar words
  • Frequently reverse or omit letters and sounds
  • Struggle to remember spelling patterns
  • Read slowly or without fluency
  • Avoid reading aloud
  • Have difficulty understanding what they read
  • Have been diagnosed with dyslexia
  • Continue to struggle despite receiving traditional reading instruction

Not every struggling reader has dyslexia, and tutoring itself is not a diagnosis. A consultation or educational assessment can help determine what type of support may be most appropriate.

Why One-on-One Instruction Can Feel Different

In a classroom, even a wonderful teacher must divide attention among many students. One-on-one instruction creates room for the educator to notice the small things.

A tutor can observe how the student approaches a problem, where confusion begins, which strategies help, and when the child is ready to move forward.

The lesson can also be adjusted in real time.

If a child needs movement, visual supports, hands-on materials, repetition, or shorter learning activities, those strategies can be incorporated into the session. Carolina Therapy Connection uses interactive activities, visual aids, educational tools, and individualized planning to help students remain engaged and motivated.

Just as importantly, one-on-one tutoring gives children a safe place to ask questions without worrying about being embarrassed in front of classmates.

Academic confidence often grows when a child experiences small, consistent moments of success.

Collaboration Matters

Children make the strongest progress when the adults supporting them are working toward the same goals.

With parent permission, collaboration may include communication among tutors, parents, teachers, educational specialists, and other professionals involved in the child’s care.

Because Carolina Therapy Connection also provides occupational therapy, physical therapy, speech therapy, counseling, and other developmental services, families may be able to access multiple forms of support within one organization when appropriate. Educational services and therapy services remain separate, but communication among professionals can help create a more complete understanding of the child.

For example, difficulty completing written work may involve academic skills, but it could also be influenced by handwriting, language formulation, attention, executive functioning, or emotional confidence. Looking at the whole child helps prevent important pieces from being missed.

Can ESA+ Funds Be Used for Tutoring?

Eligible students may be able to use ESA+ Scholarship funds for qualifying tutoring and supplemental teaching services.

Under current NCSEAA guidelines, tutoring must be provided live, either in person or online, by a tutor enrolled with SEAA. Services must support an approved academic subject, including math, science, English and language arts, social studies, or foreign language.

Carolina Therapy Connection is an approved educational services site for families using ESA+ Scholarship funds for eligible services. Because scholarship requirements and allowable expenses can change, families should confirm their child’s eligibility and contact our education team for help navigating the intake and payment process.

Finding Tutoring in Greenville or New Bern, North Carolina

Carolina Therapy Connection provides personalized educational support in Greenville and New Bern, North Carolina.

Our educational services may include:

  • One-on-one tutoring
  • Reading, writing, spelling, and math support
  • Homework and academic support
  • Dyslexia and Orton Gillingham reading support
  • Informal and formal educational assessments
  • Educational consultations
  • Parent guidance
  • Collaboration with teachers and other professionals
  • Support for reluctant or discouraged learners

Every child learns differently. Our goal is not to force a student into one particular method. It is to understand how that child learns, identify what is getting in the way, and build a plan that helps them grow.

Your Child Is More Than a Grade

When school becomes difficult, children sometimes begin to believe that they are the problem.

They are not lazy or incapable. They may simply need more time, a different explanation, targeted instruction, or someone who can help uncover the missing pieces.

The right academic support can strengthen skills, but it can also restore something equally important…a child’s belief in their own ability to learn.

Ready to Learn More?

If you are looking for one-on-one tutoring, reading support, dyslexia support, or an educational assessment in Greenville or New Bern, our education team would love to help you determine the best next step for your child.

Complete an Educational Services Inquiry

Learn More About Educational Assessments and Tutoring

Contact Carolina Therapy Connection

Concussions in Children: What Parents Should Know

Children of all ages can experience concussions, even during everyday play. Knowing what to look for and how to support recovery can help your child heal safely and confidently.

What Is a Concussion?

A concussion is a mild injury to the brain that can occur when a child hits their head or experiences a sudden movement that causes the brain to shift inside the skull. While concussions often happen after a direct hit to the head, they can also occur during falls, car accidents, or sports activities when the body stops or changes direction quickly.

Common Concussion Symptoms in Children

Concussion symptoms can vary from child to child and may appear immediately or hours later. Some common signs include:

  • Headaches
  • Nausea or vomiting
  • Dizziness or balance difficulties
  • Sensitivity to light or noise
  • Changes in sleep (sleeping more or less than usual)
  • Difficulty concentrating or keeping up at school
  • Increased irritability or emotional changes

For babies and toddlers, watch for:

  • Decreased interest in play
  • Eating less than usual
  • Changes in bathroom habits
  • Increased crying, frustration, or clinginess

What to Do If You Suspect a Concussion

If you think your child may have a concussion, seek medical care as soon as possible. A healthcare provider can evaluate your child and determine the next steps for care. While imaging tests may be used in some cases, many concussions do not require them.

Early medical guidance helps protect your child’s brain and supports a safer recovery.

Supporting Recovery at Home

Once your child returns home, the brain needs time to rest and heal. The first 24–48 hours play a critical role in recovery.

During this time:

  • Limit screen use (TVs, phones, tablets)
  • Avoid physical activity
  • Encourage quiet, low-stimulation activities
  • Allow rest and sleep as needed

If symptoms increase, reduce stimulation further and consult your child’s provider.

Returning to School and Activities

After the initial rest period, your child can gradually return to daily activities based on how they feel. Recovery should always move at your child’s pace.

Some children may need:

  • Shortened school days
  • Extra breaks
  • Reduced homework or screen time

Sports and active play should only resume with medical guidance. If symptoms return, activity levels should decrease.

When Symptoms Last Longer Than Expected

Most children begin to feel better within one to three months, but every child heals differently. If symptoms persist, such as headaches, dizziness, balance problems, or discomfort with movement, physical therapy may HELP!

How Physical Therapy Supports Concussion Recovery

Physical therapy plays an important role in concussion recovery, especially when symptoms linger. A physical therapist evaluates how your child moves, balances, and responds to motion. This may include checking posture, eye movements, walking patterns, and coordination.

Based on these findings, the therapist creates a personalized plan that supports safe healing.

Physical therapy can help by:

  • Improving balance and coordination
  • Reducing dizziness and motion sensitivity
  • Supporting safe return to daily movement and sports
  • Building confidence during recovery

Therapists guide children through a gradual return-to-activity process, adjusting the plan if symptoms reappear.

Education and Ongoing Support

Physical therapists also teach families how to manage symptoms at home, recognize signs of overexertion, and understand when rest or activity is appropriate. They often collaborate with doctors and schools to support a safe return to learning and play.

When Is Physical Therapy Complete?

Your child may finish physical therapy when they:

  • Experience no symptoms during rest or activity
  • Participate fully in school, play, and sports
  • No longer need accommodations or restrictions

With the right care, patience, and support, most children fully recover and return to the activities they enjoy.

How Can Carolina Therapy Connection Help?

At CTC, we help children recover from concussions through personalized physical therapy programs designed to restore balance, coordination, and confidence. Our licensed therapists support children throughout recovery and guide families every step of the way.

If you have concerns about your child’s recovery or ongoing symptoms after a concussion, we’re here to help!

👉 Visit our website to learn more or schedule an evaluation today.

Greenville Clinic Expansion Updates

Greenville Clinic Expansion Updates

We’ve got BIG things happening at Carolina Therapy Connection and we are so excited to be sharing them with you! After years of prayer and planning, we have been blessed with the ability to expand our Greenville clinic to serve more kiddos and families in Eastern NC. Out of the trust and kindness our community has shown to us we have been able to expand both our services and our physical clinic space from 1200 sq ft. to 15,000 sq ft. over the past 11 years! We are so grateful to our families, our community partners, and our referral sources for the overwhelming support of Carolina Therapy Connection!

Carolina Therapy Connection Greenville Clinic Expansion

Carolina Therapy Connection Greenville Clinic Expansion

Carolina Therapy Connection Greenville Clinic Expansion

What will this new expansion entail?

Everything to help our kiddos and families reach their goals by serving them more efficiently! This new space will include:

  • 3 new sensory gym spaces that vary in sensory feedback to meet the sensory needs of each child (low stimulation and high stimulation environments).
  • An interactive fiber optic sensory space for a serene and calming experience.
  • A space designated for our Interactive Metronome treatment modality. Learn more about this evidenced-based system here.
  • 2 feeding spaces to host feeding groups that develop sensory-based feeding skills for kids of all ages, and to house our feeding specialist team.
  • A separate physical therapy gym with state-of-the-art equipment to build developmental skills.
  • Collaborative workspaces and technology for all of our clinicians and staff.
  • Private treatment rooms for all disciplines.
  • An even larger lobby for caregiver comfort.
  • A space dedicated for expansion of our Educational Services.
  • A large outdoor, protected courtyard space for the option to provide services in a safe outdoor area.
  • Marketing and communications studio for improved ability to develop content for our families.
  • State-of-the-art training center for continuing education and advanced training of our staff. This will also be used for community events like our Neurodivergent Hangouts and Parent Support Groups.AND… several other spaces for future expansion of our services.. stay tuned for more information about what these will be!

Carolina Therapy Connection Greenville Clinic Expansion

Carolina Therapy Connection Greenville Clinic Expansion

Carolina Therapy Connection Greenville Clinic Expansion

How will this expansion impact our current families?

We have entrusted our amazing local contractors at WIMCO to ensure that our families and kiddos are SAFE during all of the construction. Construction will move in phases beginning on Monday, August 16th and ending sometime in April (or sooner). Each phase will allow our families to have access to parking with safety fencing and signage that will be posted. Please be sure to follow these signs! Our current building will be updated and outfitted during the process, but not until towards the later phases. In the meantime, we should see very little effects of construction inside of our current space. We will be keeping you all updated as we move throughout this process. WIMCO will have a superintendent on site daily to make sure that the needs of our families, kiddos, and staff are always being met! Safety is their #1 goal! THANK YOU for extending us grace during this time and for having patience as we navigate this exciting adventure!

Please feel free to reach out at any time with any questions or concerns you may have. 

Thank you again, from the bottom of our hearts, for making this dream a reality for all of us and allowing us to serve out our mission of informing families, enriching lives, changing futures for all of Eastern NC! 

Carolina Therapy Connection thanks WIMCO

Greenville NC Carolina Therapy Connection Expansion Updates