Showing posts with label SLT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SLT. Show all posts

Friday, 4 November 2016

Benefits of 'Assisting Students with Language Delays in the Classroom'



This language programme is designed for teachers to use within the classroom, either with the whole class or with small groups, which can be integrated into the class programme. It caters to the needs of students with a wide range of language abilities, from those with very limited language skills, to the students who find initiating or participating in conversation a challenge. It was created as a result of years spent working with students in the classroom and working closely with their teachers.



The use of Language Charts make it easy to see exactly what skills are required for the development of functional language and the step by step structure of the programme guides teachers to the skill areas appropriate to the language needs of their particular students.

The programme focuses on the three areas of language development, i.e:
·    ‘The Preverbal Skills of Language’, which provide the foundation for the development of language and are essential in order for a student to acquire functional language. These include skills such as; Attending and anticipating; Learning to look and listen; Copying actions and sounds; Waiting and taking turns.
·    ‘The Building Bricks of Language’ are the words and concepts necessary for the development of a student’s practical vocabulary, allowing them to follow instructions, respond to questions and develop their communication skills.
For example; nouns, verbs, prepositions, negatives, sequencing skills.
·    ‘The Skills of Conversation’ are required in order to provide the student with the ability to initiate and maintain an interactive conversation. These are skills such as, Waiting, listening to others and recalling information given; Speaking clearly; Asking and answering conversational questions.

Photo by Ladyheart at Morguefile.com
           
The programme provides teachers with information as to;
·    What skills are important in order to assist a student’s language development.
·    Why these skills are important, providing clear explanations of the significance of each skill and key points to remember when teaching that skill.
·    How to teach these skills, providing 180 practical activities and fun exercises to assist the development of each skill. These exercises and activities can easily be incorporated into the regular class routine and programme.

The activities in all three areas are purposely ‘Low Tech’ so the majority of resources should be readily available within most classrooms or schools. 

Francesca Bierens

Monday, 11 July 2016

5 essential pre-verbal skills parents and professionals need to know about for early communication

The learning of a young child’s first word is an exciting moment for both parents and professionals, and especially so for those with communication difficulties. There are many skills which precede the acquisition of language, and for those with special needs, it may take a little longer to get there. 



Image by Prawny at Morguefile.com


It can be disheartening for parents waiting for the first words, but a little knowledge of pre-verbal skills and their importance in laying the foundations for later speech and language can help to set small learning goals and recognise progress in communication before language takes off.

Photo by 502artistb at Morguefile.com

1. Eye contact is needed to maintain social interaction between two people, and communication can break down if eye contact is only fleeting . It can be encouraged through everyday interactions such as waiting for eye contact before giving children something they want, or setting up motivating activities such as blowing bubbles or peep-po games.



Photo by hotblack at Morguefile.com

2. Attention is needed to understand language and concentrate on one activity. Children with communication difficulties may have a short attention span but this can be developed through playing with the same toy in a variety of ways such as building towers with bricks, lining them up to make trains, playing peep-po games, hiding bricks, making animals or people, making shapes and patterns.


Photo by jdurham at Morguefile.com



3. Breath control is needed to control the use of breath combined with mouth movements in producing speech, and those with speech and communication difficulties may have poor control of the muscles used for speech. Breath control can be improved through blowing games such as blowing on the hair or the skin, blowing bubbles in the water or on the hair.


Photo by anitapeppers at Morguefile.com



4. Copying is needed to observe or imitate speech or signs, but some children with communication difficulties may be engrossed in their own world. Copying can be encouraged by playing alongside children and joining in everyday routines, as well as fun and easy activities such as copying funny faces and sounds in the mirror.





Photo by ladyheart at Morguefile.com

5. Turn taking is needed for understanding of the rules of conversational turn taking. If two people talk at once, communication can break down. Games such as rolling balls and wind up toys to and fro can help encourage turn taking as well as everyday turn taking and sharing with siblings.


Photo by gleangenie at Morguefile.com

Over 100 fun and practical activities to encourage pre-verbal skills and early communication can be found in the third edition of the popular resource ‘early Communication Skills’ by Charlotte Lynch and Julia Kidd.


- Charlotte Lynch 
Speechmark author early Communication Skills 3e


Wednesday, 30 March 2016

The Theory Behind TALKABOUT

TALKABOUT was first developed in the early 1990s when I was working as a speech and language therapist in London, UK. I was particularly interested in social skills but was frustrated by two aspects of my work as a therapist. First, there was nothing in the literature to guide me on where to start intervention following assessment; and second, my experience showed me that I was not always successful in what I was trying to teach and I could not always predict which children were going to improve and which were not. I set about to solve these two problems over a period of four years.

I started my investigations at a college of further education where I was working with 60 students who had a mild to moderate intellectual disability. We assessed all of the young people I was working with using an adapted social skills assessment from the Personal Communication Plan by Alex Hitchings and Robert Spence – now published in Kelly (2000). The students were involved in this assessment which gave us some insight into their own awareness of their difficulties. From these initial results, we grouped students into their main area of need: body language, conversational skills and assertiveness. We evaluated success through retesting on the original assessment and also compared students with poor and good awareness of their needs.

The results were fascinating. They showed that the students who had been working on their conversational skills progressed more if they had good existing non-verbal skills (ie body language), and students who had been working on their assertiveness progressed significantly more if they had good existing non-verbal and verbal skills.

In addition, we found that students who had poor self and other awareness struggled with all aspects of the work. From this, we established a hierarchy which forms the basis of the Talkabout resources.
Over the next four years, we piloted this programme using different client groups and a group of willing therapists from throughout the UK. We all found consistently that the success of intervention increased if non-verbal behaviours were taught before verbal behaviours, and if assertiveness was taught last (Kelly, 1996).


This original hierarchy then formed the basis of the first Talkabout book (Kelly, 1996) but it has been adapted over the years to include self-esteem and friendship skills. The hierarchy now looks as follows.



Using this hierarchical approach, teachers and therapists can start work with the person at a level that is appropriate to that person’s needs. They can then progress up the levels to enable the person to reach their full potential, ensuring that basic skills are taught before the more complex ones. So a student who needs work on all areas of his social skills would start work first on his body language skills and then would progress to working on his paralinguistic skills, then his conversational skills and, finally, his assertiveness skills.

If this student also had poor self-awareness and low self-esteem, he would need to work on this before working on his social skills. And if a student also had difficulties with his friendship skills, he would only work on developing these skills if he had good self-awareness and good nonverbal and verbal skills.

Of course, success is not just about what you teach first; it is also down to how you teach it.

Extract from Talkabout 2e - LOOK INSIDE

Alex Kelly 
Speechmark author of TALKABOUT

Get 20% off when you pre-order today! Hurry though this offer ends on the 30th April, enter code TA20.

Friday, 4 March 2016

What do you think about when you have toothache?

Please consider that question before we move on?

I was in Bradford recently. Facilitating a team of workers who are on the frontline
and facing difficult behaviour and aggression daily. Yet they love the young people they work with.

Those who had been excluded from school, little response, little change and little sign of hope. Still each of the group yearned to be of developmental assistance to them.


I asked them that question:

'When you have toothache, what do you think about?'
No pause.
An immediate answer from one worker
as we all stood in the circle -
"Toothache"
was the answer.

If we have toothache we struggle to concentrate on anything else.
Restless as a wolf - we feel like the cheese is falling off our cracker. Nothing else really matters.
We can see a person's behaviour but we cannot see their experience.
We can be so preoccupied by their behaviour that we don't see
beyond behaviour.

Difficult behaviour can get under our skin.
Feelings rise within us.
As emotionally intelligent as we may be the feelings we have stimulate us, sometimes, to make a regrettable response.

This is applicable in the staff room, the classroom, the team meeting, the prison, the street, the office, at home, and certainly not only when we are transacting with humans with special needs.

The way I work on awareness and skill development is by using Experiential Exercises including Blob Tree Tools.
The objectives are:
  •          Become more aware of our own feelings.
  •          Becoming more able to get into contact with them.
  •          Develop emotional literacy by being able to give each a feeling name.


So there in Bradford we throw the Blob Feelings Ball around the circle.
'Motion changes emotion' I say.

An activity, doing, is the best way to learn - to practise.
So the ball is thrown around the circle, the miss-catching it is part of the-bouncing-around fun as the ball creates smiles as humans live in expectancy as to who will receive the ball next.

The Blob figure nearest your right thumb -
'what does that Blob feel like?' I ask.
I ban the use of 'happy or sad' as all feelings can be tossed in those headings.
So minds are stretched - everyone engaging in the struggle to articulate.
Even seasoned professionals struggle to find the appropriate word.

I often ask more questions as 'right thumbs' develop their literacy.
'Describe a young person you know who feels like that?'

'When one of your youngsters feels like that, what behaviour does it drive?'

When a group is ready - the questions may become deeper and more personal-
'When did you last feel like that?'

Awareness always precedes skill.
By becoming aware of our own emotional literacy, or lack of, we can then be more sensitive to the feelings of others. More importantly, we can begin to see beyond behaviour to be more in touch with a person's toothache.

Next time I will click about working with special needs groups. I want to share some methods of how I engage them with the crisp objective of making available more tools for their life toolbox.


- Pip Wilson
Beautiful Human Person
Speechmark author of Blobs

Friday, 19 February 2016

Preparation is all important


The Pre-verbal Skills of Language


Whether we are baking a cake or building a house, we all know that good preparation is critical to the desired outcome of the project. For a cake to be delicious, the ingredients need to be measured correctly and strong, solid foundations are essential to ensure the stability of a house.
 
The same applies to language development. For a child to develop language that is functional and communicative, they firstly need to acquire the pre-verbal skills, the skills that provide the foundations on which language is built. 

It is easy to assume that if a child is able to speak, they have already acquired the pre-verbal skills but this is not necessarily the case. A child can often use words but not use these words to communicate effectively with others. Being aware of the pre-verbal skills and assisting their development is very important for the development of a child’s language. This can be done by;

  • Encouraging the child to look at you or in your direction, even briefly, when they speak to you or want to show you something.
  • Gradually developing the child’s ability to focus and concentrate on a range of activities; those he enjoys as well as activities chosen by other people, such as a parent or teacher.
  • Drawing the child’s attention to objects around them and showing them how to look at things both inside and outside, rather then just looking at objects directly in front of them.
  • Teaching the child to listen to the sounds in their environment such as planes, printers, dogs barking.
  • Encouraging the child to copy actions and sounds made which is done most effectively through play and action songs.
  • Assisting the child to wait and take turns, which is a skill that can be taught at the playground or at home, waiting for a favourite activity or at school or pre-school during group activities with other children.
  • Developing the child’s awareness and control of their face and mouth muscles by playing games in front of the mirror, encouraging them to copy different facial expressions and tongue and lip movements.

Have fun with these activities and remember it is always better to spend a short amount of time doing these activities regularly rather than hours every now and again.



********************

Francesca Bierens Speechmark author of Assisting Students with Language Delays in the Classroom

Monday, 15 February 2016

Tell a Story, to Get a Story…


Having just completed a fun, productive and interactive presentation on storytelling at a RCSLT Clinical Excellence Network workshop for children with language impairments, I asked the audience to reflect on all the information they had received at the workshop, and identify 3 changes or actions that they would put in place at work the next day.

One speech and language therapist said that she would tell her client a story. I was intrigued by that and asked her to say a little more about that. She continued, that she was often asking the children with whom she works to tell her stories, and whilst she would read stories from a book, she never simply told them a story during her storytelling sessions.

What an interesting observation and a great change to commit to making - and one that can so easily be put into practice. At the workshop, I had shared strategies to facilitate the elicitation of storytelling in children and young people with language and communication difficulties, and one strategy that I have found really effective is simply to take my turn first and share a story with the group, whether it be a personal story about something I have done over the weekend, or a wonderfully wacky and obviously fictional story about a princess, dragon or fire-eater! This gives the students the time to get comfortable, to settle down in the session and enjoy the delights of storytelling, whilst at the same time, also, getting to know a little more about me, their therapist.

It provides the children with practice in a range of essential skills related to storytelling, including listening, using appropriate body language and facial expression to show interest, or, when needed, even confusion, as well as asking focused and appropriate questions. It also, of course, gives me the valuable opportunity to model storytelling and provide them with a helpful template on which to base their stories, if required. Of course my story will have a definite beginning, middle and end, on which the children can map their stories.

Have a go and see for yourself, if you have a group of children reticent at telling stories, try and start by telling stories yourself. Involve the children in different ways, perhaps they can clap loudly or roar every time they hear you mention the monster; or they can count the number of characters in your story. Make your story exciting, fun and interesting, use props like swords and other attention-grabbing objects, and dress up like the characters in your story. Be the wizard, the witch or the dragon. And by the time you are at the end of the story, you may very well found that you are no longer the sole storyteller, but one part of a very satisfied collaborative enterprise.

Go on, try it, tell a story, or even two, to get a story… 







Victoria Joffe, Professor, Enhancement of Child and Adolescent Language and Learning

School of Health Sciences, City University London

Speechmark author of: 
Vocabulary Enrichment Programme, Narrative Intervention ProgrammeFavourite Idioms and More Favourite Idioms