Sunday, 1 December 2019

WANT

Core Word  WANT

Words of the Week:  WANT

                 

Training Video 





School DAY - IDEAS  - Communication Workshop

1. Any choice making or requesting activity allows you to model WANT. Take turns making choices and modeling “I want that!” as you choose an object/toy/color/activity/word

2. Birthdays and Christmas: Make list of things you WANT to receive as gifts, e.g. “For my birthday, I want ___”. Extend to include what other people might WANT, e.g. “My Mum wants ___; My sister wants ___”. If students cannot find words in their AAC system, they could use catalogues to find things that they want.


 3. Plan a party and make a list of food you WANT to serve and eat, e.g. “At my party I want ___”. You could also plan other party details such as: decorations, party games, birthday cake ideas, people to invite, etc.

4. Many cooking activities may involve choices, allowing opportunity for modeling and use of WANT. For example, choices for: pizza toppings when making pizza, sandwich fillings when making sandwiches, spreads when making toast, ingredients/flavourings when making milkshakes/smoothies/muffins, decorations when making cakes/cupcakes, fruits when making juices/fruit salad, vegetables when making soup/salad, etc.

5. Discuss free time and playtime, allowing student to talk about what they WANT to play with, what they games they WANT to do, who they WANT to play with, etc.


6. Working on protesting and rejecting, i.e. what the students DO NOT WANT, by presenting highly desirable and motivating items, alongside non-preferred items. Some examples of things that students may protest and say ‘I don’t WANT that!’ to include: plastic insects and spiders, water spray bottles/guns, sticky/gooey things, boring things, etc.


 7. Discuss places students want to go, e.g.. “I want to go to ___”. Make a travel list plan, a weekend/holiday plan, a poster of favourite places, etc.

8. Use music and singing to model WANT, to choose types of music, musical instruments, songs to sing, songs to listen to, choices within a song (e.g. animals for Old McDonald’s farm).

 9. Take a poll of favourite TV shows/movies, letting students say what they WANT to watch on the weekend.

10. Pair WANT with some simple action words, for fun interactive action games. Students can choose to: jump, spin, walk, run, dance, sing, etc. Take turns to make a choice such as: “I want to jump!”, then everybody can jump.

11. During craft/art time, you can talk about what you WANT to make, e.g. “I want to make a paper plane”. There may also be choices of colours and materials when WANT can be used.


12. Create digital books (using Pictello, Book Creator, Powerpoint) for any of these activities - combining photos and videos with text of students messages/writing, e.g. “I want to go to __”, “I want to play with ___”, “I want to make __”


13. Watch the Angelman Syndrome Foundation Communication Training Series video that covers teaching “want”: youtu.be/pZ2eaYnclak and www.angelman.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/four-core.pdf






Ideas credited to Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers


Drink

I Want 2

I Want to Grow a Flower


iPad Apps


Dr Panda Restaurant

Book Creator

Tarheel Readers

Toca Kitchen

iMovie Maker

Party Face.






Saturday, 23 November 2019

Make

Core Word  Make

Words of the Week:  MAKE   

                 

Training Video 





School DAY - IDEAS  - Communication Workshop

1. Watch the Angelman Syndrome Foundation Communication Training Series video that covers teaching MAKE: youtu.be/zCMGN6LNO68 and www.angelman.org/wp-
content/uploads/2016/01/Core-set-5-category.pdf

 2. Watch Youtube clips of Mister Maker. He makes many art and craft projects. Model MAKE as you watch the videos. If you decide to do one of Mister Makers projects, model MAKE as you do the activity. 


3. Take photos of student making things (e.g. in cooking or art lesson) and also of their completed projects. Model MAKE as you look back at the photos. Use the photos to put in order as a sequencing task. Use the photos to create a photo book of what the students made.


 4. Make videos (use camera app, green screen technology, time lapse, stop motion, action movie fx etc.) Model MAKE while making these videos.

 5. Talk about things MADE by man, or by nature. 


6. Many activities of daily living may use the word MAKE, look for opportunities throughout your day to model it. Here are some examples: • Cooking, e.g. let’s make it, you make it • Art & Craft, e.g. make that, you made it pretty • Lunchtime, e.g. make your lunch, make it yourself, help me make it •  

8 .Music, e.g. make music, make new song • 


 9. Lego/Blocks, e.g. make a tower, make a house, make it, make that, can we make that?


10. Make things using plasticine, silly putty



11. Try these creation apps! Model MAKE as you make digital pizza, cookies, icecream, burgers, anything! • Bamba apps: www.bambatown.com/ including Bamba BBQ, Bamba pizza, Bamba ice-cream, Bamba burger • Cookie Doodle: itunes.apple.com/au/app/cookie-doodle/id342128086?mt=

12 • Dr Panda’s restaurant: itunes.apple.com/us/app/dr.-pandas-restaurant/id550971517?mt=8 • Toca Kitchen: itunes.apple.com/au/app/toca-kitchen/id476553281?mt=8 • Party Face: itunes.apple.com/au/app/party-face!/id593062627?mt=8



Ideas credited to Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers


Making Popcorn

Making Pizza

Man Made



iPad Apps


Dr Panda Restaurant

Book Creator

Tarheel Readers

Toca Kitchen

iMovie Maker

Party Face.






Saturday, 9 November 2019

Put

Words of the Week - Put 

            

Training Video 


School DAY - IDEAS  - Communication Workshop


 1. There will be many classroom activities were you can find chances to model PUT, for example: • Packing bags (e.g. put it in your bag) • Art/Crafts activities (e.g. put on a button) • Cooking (e.g. put in the sugar) • Clean up time (e.g. put it away, put in the bin) • Dressing/ Shoes (e.g. put on shoes) • Grooming (e.g. put on toothpaste)

2. Dress up games are great for modeling PUT: Put it on, Put on that, etc. 

3. There are some common games where PUT can be modeled, for example: Mr Potato Head, Puzzles, Pop-Up Pirate, blocks, playdoh, shape sorters, etc.

4. Do sorting activities. Model PUT as you discuss where you PUT things, e.g. FOOD - PUT in fridge or cupboard, OBJECTS- PUT inside or outside, FURNITURE - what room do we PUT it in, TOYS - PUT in toy box or cupboard, RECYCLE/RUBBISH - what bin to PUT it in 

5. Take photos of things you PUT on (e.g. clothes, hats, etc.), or things you PUT IN (water in cup; milk in fridge). Model PUT as you discuss where you put these things.

Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers






LINKING APPS





Sunday, 3 November 2019

Turn

Words of the Week - Turn              

 

Training Video 


School DAY - IDEAS  - Communication Workshop

1. During any activity that requires or allows turn taking, model “my turn”, “who turn?”, “your turn”, “his turn”, “when is my turn?”, “not his turn”, “your turn now!”, etc. 


2. Pause when navigating within the school or in the community and ask “turn?”, “where turn?”, “where do we turn?”, “do we turn now?”


3. Give directions to students “turn right”, “turn left”, “don’t turn”, “turn here”, “turn now”. 


4. There are many opportunities to model “turn” as you turn pages of books that you are reading.


 5. Rhyme: “Teddy bear, Teddy bear, turn around” is a fun way to model “turn”


 6. Do activity with transformations, eg. turn water into ice, turn oranges into orange juice, turn milk into icecream, turn apples into applesauce, etc.


Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers


LINKING APPS





Some & ALL

Training Video 


School DAY - IDEAS  - Communication Workshop

1. Whenever dealing with more than one of a thing or of people, model using SOME and ALL - “SOME students go there”, “ALL students come to circle”. 

2.When you require SOME of something, you can ask how much or how many you need. Go to Describing > How Much/ How Many to find many useful words to describe the amount of something.

 3. Watch the Angelman Syndrome Foundation Communication Training Series presentation on Some and All: youtu.be/_qgW4g9LKYA 

4. Use the Numbers page to count out SOME or ALL of items.

5. Use Food > Cooking Utensils to measure how much SOME or ALL is. 


Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers












LINKING APPS





Sunday, 27 October 2019

Turn

Words of the Week - Turn              

 

Training Video 


School DAY - IDEAS  - Communication Workshop

1. During any activity that requires or allows turn taking, model “my turn”, “who turn?”, “your turn”, “his turn”, “when is my turn?”, “not his turn”, “your turn now!”, etc. 


2. Pause when navigating within the school or in the community and ask “turn?”, “where turn?”, “where do we turn?”, “do we turn now?”


3. Give directions to students “turn right”, “turn left”, “don’t turn”, “turn here”, “turn now”. 


4. There are many opportunities to model “turn” as you turn pages of books that you are reading.


 5. Rhyme: “Teddy bear, Teddy bear, turn around” is a fun way to model “turn”


 6. Do activity with transformations, eg. turn water into ice, turn oranges into orange juice, turn milk into icecream, turn apples into applesauce, etc.


Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers



LINKING APPS




Sunday, 20 October 2019

WANT

Words of the Week - WANT                  

 

Training Video 


School DAY - IDEAS  Communication Workshop

1.Any choice making or requesting activity allows you to model WANT. Take turns making choices and modeling “I want that!” as you choose an object/toy/color/activity/word
2. Birthdays and Christmas: Make list of things you WANT to receive as gifts, e.g. “For my birthday, I want ___”. Extend to include what other people might WANT, e.g. “My Mum wants ___; My sister wants ___”. If students cannot find words in their AAC system, they could use catalogues to find things that they want.
3. Many cooking activities may involve choices, allowing opportunity for modeling and use of WANT. For example, choices for: pizza toppings when making pizza, sandwich fillings when making sandwiches, spreads when making toast, ingredients/flavourings when making milkshakes/smoothies/muffins, decorations when making cakes/cupcakes, fruits when making juices/fruit salad, vegetables when making soup/salad, etc.
 4. Discuss free time and playtime, allowing student to talk about what they WANT to play with, what they games they WANT to do, who they WANT to play with, etc.
 5. Working on protesting and rejecting, i.e. what the students DO NOT WANT, by presenting highly desirable and motivating items, alongside non-preferred items. Some examples of things that students may protest and say ‘I don’t WANT that!’ to include: plastic insects and spiders, water spray bottles/guns, sticky/gooey things, boring things, etc.
 6. Discuss places students want to go, e.g.. “I want to go to ___”. Make a travel list plan, a weekend/holiday plan, a poster of favourite places, etc.
Ideas credited to Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers








LINKING APPS






Saturday, 21 September 2019

Finished

Words of the Week  Finished                   

 Training Video 

School DAY - IDEAS  - Communication Workshop

1.  Every day show a calendar. Talk about the days of the month and the days of the week. Talk about what day it is today. Does today "finish" the week? Does it "finish" the month?

 2.  It is important to match behaviours with FINISHED, e.g. if you have a student that will just get up and leave an activity, you might say “Oh, you are leaving, you are saying that you are FINISHED”, while pointing to FINISHED on their AAC system.

 3.   It is easy to model FINISHED throughout the day, as activities are completed: finished reading the book, finished eating lunch, finished the painting, finished the song, finished the game, at pack up time etc.

4.  Have races, and model FINISHED at the end of the race.

5. Get a puppet to eat a whole plate of plastic food, and model FINISHED when it has eaten all the food.

6. Search “finish the drawing” in Google Images for many fun drawing worksheets that have missing parts and need FINISHING!

7. While making something (cooking, craft, anything!), take photos at the start, and when it is finished (and the steps in between if you like). While looking at the photos, model language around what you did, including talking about the finished product- “Look, it’s FINISHED! You FINISHED it!”. Use the photos to make a class book in an ebook creator such as Pictello. Also use photos for predictable chart writing.

8. There are many different types of vehicles, and they all go at different speeds for different purposes. Collect pictures of different types of vehicles (car, skateboard, airplane, tank, rowboat, motor boat, wagon, mail truck, etc.). Talk about how some vehicles can move faster than others, and why they might go at the speed they do. Then hold up two or three vehicles and ask, in a race, "which" will "finish" first?


Ideas credited to Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers

Hare and the Tortoise



LINKING APPS

Toca Boca  Kitchen  - Foods I Like to Eat 



Saturday, 14 September 2019

More

Words of the Week-  More    

              

 Training Video 




School DAY - MORE  - Communication Workshop


1. Mathematic's Lesson - Model more or less during Mathematic's lessons.
2. Music - Play and pause the music.
3. Art - Play Doh - Give a little bit of Play Doh - model giving more Play Doh.
4. Balloons - Blow up a little at a time.
5.Swing - One more push.
6. Reading - you can pause during book and have the communicator request "more" reading.
7. Music -Instruments and singing: Play instruments and sing, and pause.
8. Animal Project - which animal has more? Not all animals are the same, some are bigger or smaller, some have different types of mouths or legs, but also other things are different. Collect pictures of different animals with different numbers of something (spider legs, fly eyes, zebra strips, cow/leopard spots, crab pincers, etc) and ask "which" has "more" legs/eyes/etc.

Ideas credited to Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom


Tarheel Readers

Who has More?
More 2
Number 6
One More






LINKING APPS







Sunday, 8 September 2019

Core Word STOP

Training Video - STOP


LAMP training Video 


Ideas for around the school


Stop pairs easily with Go for many movement related activities.
1. Physical Education - Stop while swinging, running , jumping , hopping etc.
2. Music - Stop playing an instrument . 
3. Music - Stop the music
4. Musical statues.. 
5. STEM - Stoping toy cars, beebots, sphero and robots.
6 . Boundary Training - stop at the line.
Ideas have been generated from various sources, but primarily are from https://www.assistiveware.com/blog/assistiveware-core-word-classroom

Tarheel Readers

STOP IT
WALKING SONG
Making Pop Corn.
Dr Jean Go

Resources & Links

Communication Workshop

Assistive Ware - 

CoreAAC Language Lab


Thursday, 15 August 2019

NOT


Words of the Week NOT                    

 Training Video 




1. Put things in the wrong place and model "Oh no NOT there.
2. Using Bookcreator App or Tarheel Reader - create a class book on things you DO NOT LIKE.
3. During music lesson play sounds that you DO NOT like- model - NOT like .
4. Model and discuss thing you DO NOT EAT in cooking lessons.


Tarheel Readers



Resources Links




 




Sunday, 11 August 2019

Core Word GO

Word of the WEEK GO

Training Video .    

LAMP training Video 

Ideas for around the school

1.Teaching Go works really well with a great big expectant pause… So when playing, say “Ready, set (wait) …….”, or “1, 2, 3 (wait) …..”. Remember that if the student does not add “GO”, you can go ahead and model GO anyway.
 2. When modeling GO, make multiple opportunities to model the word, by stopping and pausing throughout the activity.
 3. Pair working on GO with “stop” or “come”, as appropriate.
 4. There are many toys/games where you can model GO. Here are some examples: • Swinging - stop the swing and model “go”. • Slide - at the top of the slide, model “go”. • Spinning tops - wind it up and model “go” when you release it • Wind-up toys - wind it up and model “go” when you release it • Cars, trains (or any wheel toys).
 5. Musical instruments and musical statues.
 6. Balloons - blow up balloons and model “go” as you let it go to fly around the room • Card games/ board games - you can model “go”, or “my go”, to request a turn during the game • Racing/running/walking/riding/pushing - model “go” for the start of any of these. •
 7. During cooking lessons, use GO, as you turn on blenders, start stirring, turn on the microwave, set the timer for the oven and more.
 8. During science experiments, use GO to start the experiment or during relevant steps.
 9. Explore a unit of work about “things that go” (transport/vehicles).
10. Model GO + places: discuss places students like to go, places they went to, places they wish to go to, places to go to around the school, classroom, home, etc.

Ideas have been generated from various sources, but primarily are from https://www.assistiveware.com/blog/assistiveware-core-word-classroom

Tarheel Readers

Go IN
Go 5
Go Not Go
Dr Jean Go

Resources & Links

 Communication WorkshopAssistive Ware - CoreAAC Language Lab


Thursday, 8 August 2019

Core Word Like

Words of the Week  LIKE                     

 Training Video 

School DAY - IDEAS  - Communication Workshop
1. When communicator shows evident enjoyment of something, or “you DON’T LIKE that” when the communicator protests or is upset.
2.  Model “I like __” during class discussions for things you like and then give students a turn to finish the sentence.
3. Using Bookcreator - Take photos of things you like and create a class book - “What I like”.
4. Play an action game… e.g. Jump LIKE a frog, Roar LIKE a lion.
5. During cooking lessons, discuss foods you LIKE, or do NOT LIKE. Make sure you have unusual or uncommon foods to taste, which can provide good opportunities for modeling “NOT LIKE 
6. For Older students topics could include Computer games I Like , Food I like , Music I like

Ideas credited to Assistiveware Core Word  Classroom

Tarheel Readers

Spot the Dog
Like Not Like
I like dogs
Drink


The following books have repeated lines with the word “like” 
Green Eggs and Ham, by Dr. Seuss
What Do You Like?, by Michael Grejniec 
I really like Slop, by Mo Willems
Maisy likes Driving, by Lucy Cousins • 
I like Books, by Anthony Browne • 
Run like a Rabbit, by Alison Lester • 
Things I like, by Anthony Browne • 



LINKING APPS

Toca Boca  Kitchen  - Foods I Like to Eat