I recently created a Mat Man activity for the Interactive White Board, based on the same activity from Handwriting Without Tears. After listening to the song, we created Mat Man on the Interactive White Board and then the students were given the opportunity to draw Mat Man. I chose to use clip art for the eyes, nose, mouth, ears and hands as I felt it was more concrete for the students as opposed to circles and half-circles. We have been stacking the students drawings from month to month on the bulletin board so we can flip quickly through them to see their progress.
Here are our pictures for December.
Interactive White Board ideas and tips, and general ideas and inspirations from my Diagnostic Kindergarten class.
Thursday, December 10, 2015
Monday, November 16, 2015
Yoga
Last week we introduced a short yoga activity to the end of our Interactive White Board time twice a week. Yoga is a great way to develop self-regulation skills and gross motor skills. We have already seen a big improvement in the amount of time the students can attend to the Yoga video. So far we have been using "Bug Yoga" which involves three poses.
Bug Yoga
Bug Yoga
Thursday, November 12, 2015
DIY Sensory Bag
We made this sensory bag using four easy to find items. We got a heavy duty Ziploc bag from our stock order (TDSB stock catalogue) and added 2 bottles of coloured hair gel from Dollarama, and a whole bunch of sparkles. We then taped all the way around on the seams with packing tape. The students have been enjoying using this on the light table (as seen below), drawing shapes, tracing letters, and making hand prints.
Sunday, September 20, 2015
Door Knob
One of our students is very interested in how things work. He is especially interested in the class door latch mechanism. In order to stop him from investigating its mechanics and opening the door throughout the day, which is a safety risk with other friends, I built him his own knob. Our classroom has an accessible handle rather than a turn-knob, but I am hoping he will be just as interested in this one as the real one.
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Step-By-Step for Morning Annoucements
We are very excited to have our students do the Morning Announcements for three days next week!Some of our friends in other classes recorded the morning message for our non-verbal students. We are looking forward to having the opportunity to take part in this part of the school day.
Monday, May 11, 2015
O'Canada
Every morning we watch the American Sign Language video of O'Canada in conjunction with the anthem being played over the announcements. The version we watch was created by staff at the Metropolitan School for the Deaf in the TDSB. You can see the video below.
Watch O'Canada in ASL
Watch O'Canada in ASL
Thursday, April 2, 2015
World Autism Awareness Day
Today we celebrated World Autism Awareness Day with a blue wearing bubble party.
I thought I would share some of my favourite quotes about Autism:
“Think of it: a disability is usually defined in terms of what is missing. … But autism … is as much about what is abundant as what is missing, an over-expression of the very traits that make our species unique.”
― Paul Collins, Not Even Wrong: Adventures in Autism
I thought I would share some of my favourite quotes about Autism:
“Think of it: a disability is usually defined in terms of what is missing. … But autism … is as much about what is abundant as what is missing, an over-expression of the very traits that make our species unique.”
― Paul Collins, Not Even Wrong: Adventures in Autism
From Ten Things Every Child
With Autism Wished You Knew
I am a child with
autism. I am not “autistic.” My autism is one aspect of my total character.
It does not define me as a person. Are you a person with thoughts, feelings and
many talents, or are you just fat (overweight), myopic (wear glasses) or klutzy
(uncoordinated, not good at sports)?
The following quote is about disability in general and it is very profound:
“Children with disabilities are stronger than we know, they fight the battles
that most will never know.”
― Misti Renea Neely
― Misti Renea Neely
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Sensory Combination
Our students have been big fans of the multi-coloured rice bin for sensory play. A fellow teacher added a picture of students using a sandbox on the light table (thanks Pinterest), so today we placed our rice bin on the light table. The students really enjoyed the added sensory input of the light shining through rice.
Thursday, February 26, 2015
Literacy Group Activity
In the past month we have been working hard on developing early literacy skills with our students. Our students are big fans of Brown Bear, Brown Bear Who Do You See? and similar books. We created picture symbol boards with all the characters from Brown Bear for several of our students. Each student has a board, one member of the staff read the story and the group is asked who they see on the page. The students then pull off and hand the picture symbol of the appropriate character to the staff member reading the story. We are using similar pictures to the ones in the book. We used plastic Dollarama clipboards as the base, these allow us to have four "pages" in order to add the symbols for different stories. We recently added the Boardmaker pictures for the animals found in Polar Bear, Polar Bear Who Do You Hear?.
Monday, January 12, 2015
3D Wooden Puzzle Tower
Last week I was looking through some of the vendor catalogues for some new materials for my class. I found an interesting puzzle tower but it was more than $50. I decided I could make a similar toy for much cheaper. After a Home Depot run I spent a couple hours building it in my dad's workshop. I left the wood unfinished as it fits more with our school's natural materials philosophy. I bought enough wood to make two, so the grand total for one of the puzzles was only about $10.
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