About Us
Founder: Andras Pėto
Professor Andrįs Peto (born in Hungary in 1893) was a practitioner of physical
rehabilitation whose work provided the foundation for conductive education.
Between 1930 and 1938, Peto published many literary, philosophical and medical works.
He was the editor-in-chief of the periodical Biologische Heilkunst (Biological Healing).
His institute, the National Institute of Motor Therapy, officially opened in 1952.
Instead of following the medical model of providing different therapies, Peto created a
framework for an educational model in which children with disabilities could have an
education that met their particular physical and intellectual needs.
Conductive education (CE) entered the public consciousness in the mid-1980s, as a result
of two television documentaries "Standing Up For Joe" (1986), and "To Hungary with Love"
(1987). In recent years, CE has gained more and more acceptance in the rehabilitation of
people with motor disorders. While CE had been developed first and foremost for children
who suffered from cerebral palsy or head injury, CE has also been used with adults with
Parkinson's disease, multiple sclerosis and after-stroke conditions.
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