We've all been there: after 280173 iterations of your therapy schedule, you still have a lot of mixed groups. What to do when you have little Johnny working on prepositions, little Suzy working on past tense verbs, and little Kimmy working on /r/? Enter my secret weapon: interactive books! Here's how I use them to target every goal on my caseload:
Research has shown that incorporating movement into learning is the best way to engage children and encourage generalization of skills. I love a good worksheet now and then, but when you are first teaching a concept, using manipulatives (SLP-speak for "items you can move around") and the children themselves is the best way to get them learning. We also know that literacy instruction is important. My favorite way to combine the two to target every goal on my caseload is through using interactive books. What is an interactive book, you ask? It's a book that "requires participation and interaction by the reader". In the case of most interactive books for speech, this involves pieces that the student can attach to various parts of the book to answer questions or interact with the story. Below is an example of one you can find in my TPT store, "Leo's Lunch for /L/ and /L/ blends". There are many different interactive books to choose from- for younger students, you can use board books. I like to buy mine from TPT in order to support other SLP's and to find books that already target a specific goal (it gives me one less thing to plan for!). Here are some of my favorites:
The great thing about interactive books is that you can keep each child engaged while you read by giving them a specific picture and having them listen for when they need to add it to the book. Little hands love having something to fidget with while you read! You can also use the removable pictures as a cue to help students who need visual supports while answering questions, without having to use a separate visual aid. Another way I love to make interactive books work for my entire caseload is to print out a master copy in color that I laminate and add Velcro to, then print half-page-sized sheets in black-and-white that students can glue the pictures onto. If you have students who need more tactile input while you read, you can have them follow along and glue their pictures in. If you want them to practice more of the concept at home, send it home with them. Parents have always enjoyed those books because they can re-use them by reading to their kids after they are finished gluing the items in the book. Those are my tips for using interactive books for every student on your caseload! Be sure to check out the interactive books from my store: "Where Is the Frog?" FREEBIE, "Where is the Snowflake?" FREEBIE, and "Going Poop on the Potty" social story FREEBIE, and "Leo's Lunch: An Interactive Book for /L/ and /L/ blends", and let me know what you think! Related posts:
4 Comments
10/27/2022 07:59:38 am
Economy yourself represent mind cup particularly minute. Base box various that.
Reply
Leave a Reply. |
About MEI'm Jill! I love to create and blog about fun, evidence-based resources that make the lives of parents and busy SLPs easier. Archives
February 2018
Categories
All
|