Teaching Tools... FOR PARENTS
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Providing teaching tools for children with autism is where I
hope to spend more time. I'll be adding new tools to this
section as they are completed. Some of these may take a while to open, but
I think you'll find they are well worth the wait.
Simply SAVE
them to your hard drive and THEN open them... they are huge... so... SAVE
first... you won't want to run these off the Internet! These are
files that children can view/listen to over and over again to help them learn
key concepts.. :o)
Links to some tools are provided below
but I encourage all parents to read this entire section first in order to
understand the reasoning behind the way I do the things that I do...
My Theory In Making These Tools
- Please take the time to read this
NOTE:
The author reserves all rights pertaining to the
distribution of these materials.
No one has the right to copy, sell, or modify these materials, in part or in
whole. I provide these to help children, however, these are still
copyrighted materials and persons who want
to use these in a professional way (therapists, educators, etc.) are required to
purchase these materials (please
contact me if you are interested in purchasing
these materials for professional use).
ONLY parents of children with autism, Down Syndrome or schizophrenia have my
permission to use these materials for their children at home - FOR FREE.
Tool |
Comment |
TO ACCESS TOOLS,
Click on the red link
in this column for a given subject or on link in the
comments column. |
You may find you need only certain sections of my
materials based on what your child knows, but I tried to provide pretty well
everything I could think of in terms of "concepts". The nice thing
about that is that in working with Zachary, I can skip over what he already
knows and move on to areas of weakness and focus on those materials. |
Binder/Plastic Sheets |
Just a general comment - I use binders and plastic sheet
covers for most of my tools. That way, I can pull out whatever
"sheet" I want to cover with Zachary that day. It helps keep my
tools clean, reusable and in order. :o) |
Teaching Letters, Phonics and Sign
|
This link provides an overview of "where a child should
be" as far as language development based on that child's age. I
provide this to help parents gauge this issue a little more. It
is often when you see "what it should be" that you realize just how behind
your child may truly be... and hence, the reason for concern.
http://www.childdevelopmentinfo.com/development/language_development.shtml
The tools I personally provide below will hopefully help many of our
children to "catch up".
ABCs, Sounds and Signs (Phonics By Sign).
This is a Powerpoint slideshow with 246 slides... it is
fully narrated...the presentation runs
"automatically" for easy viewing by the child. If you have
Microsoft Office 2002 or later, you should have the correct version of Powerpoint on your computer.
This provides each letter (big and small), the
sound for each letter and the sign language for each letter... this also
cover vowels, consonants, blends (i.e., pl, sm, etc.) and diagraphs (ght,
etc.), special sounds (oo, sh, ch, etc.), silent letters, and word
formation.
This presentation takes advantage of "co-located
functions" within the temporal lobe - that part of the brain
responsible for the understanding of language.
Note that within the temporal lobe are also found
auditory processing and face, place and body part recognition (the ONLY
visual functions in the temporal lobe - perhaps explaining why so many
children with autism are non-verbal - in my opinion, that may greatly
explain why so many "picture systems" don't seem to help so many of these
children - and why some appear to respond to sign language).
Note that some who are on the autism spectrum also
suffer from "Face
Blindness" (inability to recognize or see faces - they may appear
"blurry) and as such, that may explain why sign language becomes one of the
only viable options for these children and why things like "eye contact" are
so difficult for these children.
Special Instructions:
You will want to save this to your hard drive rather than opening it online.
The file is large and can take a little while to download and so, you only want to
have to do that once. When you download, give the file the name
ABCs-Sounds-Signs
and hit ok. Users are required to use this specific name for copyright
reasons. That should then put this file in your "documents"
folder in your C: drive. When you open the file, hit the "read only"
feature. I put a password on it to prevent anyone from modifying
it. Once it opens, go to the menu at the top of your screen
where it says Slideshow and select "View Show". That will start the
slide show and run through the whole thing automatically. You
can also use your down arrow keys to move through the slides (a right mouse
click allows you to pause, end, etc.).
I also call this one "Phonics By Sign" - remember - OPEN
AS "READ ONLY" and save to your hard drive for quicker access next time!
:o)
ABCs-Sounds-Signs
Below are other resources tied to "ABCs",
etc.
One comment here though... In teaching how to write
letters, I would not teach them in the order they are found in the
alphabet... here's why...
Take the letter "d" for example... "Big D" is
first a "stick down" and a circular motion to the right... but, "little d"
is the exact opposite... the circular motion comes first - and it is to the
left... and the stick is made last... complete opposites in how the same
letter is made... I think that may contribute to a lot of confusion for some
of these children...
Personally... if I had to teach how to make letters
again... I would teach "similar letters first"... (i.e., If I
can make an "o", I can make a small a, a small d, a small g, a small q...
all these letters make the motion of the circle first... in all these it is
to the left and then the "stick part" comes last). So that is
how I personally would teach letter formation... teaching similar letters
together - the simple fact is that the only place I find letters in the
"alphabet order" is in the alphabet... so, if the child can already
recognize the letters when they are presented in a random way, it really
doesn't matter if the writing of letters is taught "in order" or not.
I would also start with lowercase letters only first (those are the ones
children see the most of in real life) and then take the same type of
approach to teaching letter writing for the capital letters once the
lowercase letters were known. You can then easily "match the
two" together , in alphabetical order, in a final step. :o)
Example:
I would teach them in this
sequence... to best take advantage of "like motions", etc.
Group 1: c, o, a,
d, g, q, e
Group 2: b,
p
Group 3: i,
l, t, j, k
Group 4: r,
n, m, h
Group 5: v,
w, x, y, z
Group 6 (special in that they
don't really fit with others): e, f, u, s
Then, look at how capital letters are made and consider making similar
"motion groups" there too...
Group 1: B,
D, P, R,
Group 2: C,
G, O, Q,
Group 3: L,
E, F, T, I,
H, K
Group 4 : A, V, M, W,
X, Y, Z
Group 5 (special):
N, J,
S, U
Other than that issue of "how to introduce
the letters" for teaching letter formation, here's another good resource for
parents - allows you to pick a letter and include a picture and download
practice sheets, etc. (i.e., a is for apple)
http://www.handwritingforkids.com/handwrite/index.htm
(this one is pretty good... lots of great tools that can be downloaded for
free - this site links to a ton of other resource links providing teaching
materials online).
|
Teaching
Shapes |
This is another Powerpoint slideshow presentation... If you have
Microsoft Office 2002 or later, you should have the correct version of Powerpoint on your computer.
There are 124 slides in this slideshow
that is fully narrated. Shapes covered include: circle, oval, triangle, square,
rectangle, rounded rectangle, trapezoid, parallelograms, diamond/rhombus, star,
hexagon, heptagon, octagon, nonagon, decagon, cross, sector, heart, arc,
half-circle, cube, pyramid, sphere, etc.
Special Instructions:
You will want to save this to your hard drive rather than opening it online.
The file is large and can take a little while to download and so, you only want to
have to do that once. When you download, give the file the name
Let's Learn About Shapes
and hit ok. Users are required to use this specific name for copyright
reasons. That should then put this file in your "documents"
folder in your C: drive. When you open the file, hit the "read only"
feature. I put a password on it to prevent anyone from modifying
it. Once it opens, go to the menu at the top of your screen
where it says Slideshow and select "View Show". That will start the
slide show and run through the whole thing automatically. You
can also use your down arrow keys to move through the slides (a right mouse
click allows you to pause, end, etc.).
Note: Computer monitors vary in how they
display various colors... that may impact the colors you see somewhat...
just something to keep in mind as you go through these materials.
I can only go based on how they appear on my monitor as I describe them...
hopefully, they will match what you see fairly closely too.
Let's Learn About
Shapes
This link provides a place to get "practice sheets" for
some basic shapes...
http://www.handwritingforkids.com/handwrite/manuscript/shapes/index.htm
|
Breaking The Code To Colors!
Teaching Colors
(color sheets only - showing different shades of a color)
(to view online click
on title above)
(to open as PDF file - go to
PDF link in this section) |
I'm of the opinion that the autistic need to be taught
concepts behind colors and perhaps
one color at a time... including the various "shades" of that color before
moving on to the next. The issue I see here is that to tell a child
with autism "this is red, blue, green, yellow, etc." and to LATER introduce
new shades of "red, blue, green, yellow, etc." would be very confusing to a
child with autism - a child whom I very much believe lives based on
"references"... and as such, one really does not want "moving targets" for
references - at least not until the CONCEPT of how colors are made and how
they can vary in shades is introduced to do away with the confusion of
"moving targets/references". This section provides color "sheets" to
help parents who want to try this. I provide a few things here...
the first is a new tool I completed in Jan. 2005 (part of my teaching tools inventory
for children with autism). This new tool covers CONCEPTS behind colors and
then introduces the idea of "hues" and "shades" in order to make the child
understand that there are many shades of red, and blue and green and yellow,
etc. I think, too often, we forget to include this critical fact
for young children, thinking they will just "figure it out"... but, for
children with autism, in my opinion, this omission leads to a great deal of
confusion.
Let's Learn About Colors is a 79 slide Powerpoint presentation that
is fully
narrated and automatically takes the child through
concepts, color hues, shades, etc...
Special Instructions:
You will want to save this to your hard drive rather than opening it online.
The file is large and can take a little while to download and so, you only want to
have to do that once. When you download, give the file the name
Let's Learn About Colors
and hit ok. Users are required to use this specific name for copyright
reasons. That should then put this file in your "documents"
folder in your C: drive. When you open the file, hit the "read only"
feature. I put a password on it to prevent anyone from modifying
it. Once it opens, go to the menu at the top of your screen
where it says Slideshow and select "View Show". That will start the
slide show and run through the whole thing automatically. You
can also use your down arrow keys to move through the slides (a right mouse
click allows you to pause, end, etc.).
Note: Computer monitors vary in how they
display various colors... that may impact the colors you see somewhat...
just something to keep in mind as you go through these materials.
I can only go based on how they appear on my monitor as I describe them...
hopefully, they will match what you see fairly closely too.
Let's Learn
About Colors
Open
File As PDF File To My Computer For Quick Downloading
(color sheets showing shades
only)
|
Breaking The Code To Time!
Teaching Time
(to view online click on title above)
(to open as PDF file - go to
PDF link in this section) |
2 Tools are provided here: 1) The revised tool -
the Powerpoint slideshow and 2) The old tool (pdf file format - I left that
one on my site for those who don't have Powerpoint). 1) This is another Powerpoint slideshow presentation... If you have
Microsoft Office 2002 or later, you should have the correct version of Powerpoint on your computer.
There are 160+ slides in this slideshow
that is fully narrated. Topics covered
include seconds, minutes, hours, quarter after, quarter to, 1/2 past, time
equivalents (i.e., 3:45 = 45 after 3:00 = 15 to 4:00 = 1/4 to 4:00),
numerous examples as are different practice clocks (hours, minutes after,
"to minutes"). Children are also provided with an example that
shows the minute hand going all the way from 3:00 to 4:00 o'clock and
showing how both arrows change over that time frame, etc.
Concepts of "start of a new day" and "end of the current day", am vs pm
hours, afternoon hours, evening hours, etc. are also provided.
These are probably the most in depth materials you will ever find on
teaching time and certainly materials that allow the parent to pick "which
section" to cover based on the child's needs. :o) Parents
are encouraged to go through the slides and determine how they best want to
teach their children by looking through the various sections and then
deciding how to best teach their child. All concepts are
covered, it is up to you to decide the order in which you want to introduce
them. I provide the order I gave my son in these materials...
but again... this tool certainly provides the flexibility to teaching
concepts in the order parents feel is best for their child.
Special Instructions:
You will want to save this to your hard drive rather than opening it online.
The file is large and can take a little while to download and so, you only want to
have to do that once. When you download, give the file the name
Let's Learn About Time
and hit ok. Users are required to use this specific name for copyright
reasons. That should then put this file in your "documents"
folder in your C: drive. When you open the file, hit the "read only"
feature. I put a password on it to prevent anyone from modifying
it. Once it opens, go to the menu at the top of your screen
where it says Slideshow and select "View Show". That will start the
slide show and run through the whole thing automatically. You
can also use your down arrow keys to move through the slides (a right mouse
click allows you to pause, end, etc.).
Let's Learn About Time
2) In this tool (link in left column is
the "old version" - the old tool is still quite good for those who are
looking for pretty in depth materials to teach the concept of time and don't
have access to Powerpoint 2002 or better - or you can download the pdf from
the link below).
Open
File As PDF File To My Computer For Quick Downloading
(old tool)
Copy of Clock Poster (old tool)
I provide 160+ slides to teach all the concepts
of time and provide numerous examples. This was the tool I used
to teach my son time (and later revised it as above). Zachary
easily learned time from these materials. With Zachary, I found that starting with the FINAL
clock was the best clock to show him first because it had "the basic
concepts" all there (see large red clock that takes up an entire page
in the old tool - toward the end of the pages).
Both tools allow plenty of flexibility for parents to "pick and choose
which concepts to work on" for a given day.
Other helpful hints when teaching time:
When I first taught Zachary time, I could use information in the last
20 pages (old tool and also last part in new tool) to show him specific
examples (i.e., 3:00, 3:05.... all the way to 4:00). I worked
with him on that first and then went back to solidify more difficult
concepts.
I also used the microwave to show him how long it takes for the
"minute" counter to change to the next number... I waited with him watching
it for a few minutes... always saying something like: 12:05 plus 1
minute = 12:06... and then I'd wait for that minute to go by... and the next
one too in order to give him an idea of "how long" a minute is.
I also made him count to 10 and told him that was equal to about 10 seconds.
These simple things helped to solidify the concept of "time". As
the hours went by during the day, I'd ask him "what time is it?" as often as
I could when I noticed it was "another hour" gone by.
Zachary is now able to read a clock just fine. It took me
longer to make the materials than it did for him to learn them. :o)
In these materials, I provide several "concept cards", as well as
"examples" of each key time, and finally, "questions" on time and "practice
clocks" for each concept. These tools (pdf files and the
revised Powerpoint slideshow) certainly provide for all necessary concepts and in
my opinion, and are much more complete than anything you'll find in a store.
With Zachary, I find some things I can just "zoom through" and with others,
I have to go slower, but having all the concepts there makes it easier to go
back as needed. I found that in teaching time, the best thing was
actually to make sure he knew how to count by 5 all the way around the
clock. Then, when he said the "hour" and stumbled on the "minutes"...
all I had to do was provide a "count by 5" reminder and Zachary could easily
find the answer and give me the correct time.
The other thing I found useful was to make use of the concept of
"count by 5 forward = AFTER" and "count by 5 backward = TO".
These simple tricks really helped him to nail down the concept of how to
read time.
|
Teaching "The In Between" Situation |
There are many ways to teach "the
in-between" situation to children with autism in order to show them that
"references" include more than just the "extreme" scenarios of "this way" or
"that way". Using fractions as I describe in my second book
under the "Exercises" section is a great place to start. I also
find that in reading, the best stories are those that teach "in between
situations" too.
A good example of that would be a book called
The Fire Cat by Esther Averill (ISBN: 0-06-444038-9). In this
book, a cat becomes a firehouse cat. Below is the part of the
text on page 13 in this wonderful book:
"Pickles, you are not a bad cat. You
are not a good cat."
After Zachary read that, he paused.
I could see that Zachary was trying to figure out the answer... if not good
or bad, what is he? The book then went on to give the answer:
"You are good and bad. And bad and
good. You are a mixed-up cat."
Zachary thought that was absolutely hilarious.
What is great here is that this simple children's story provides for the "in
between" situation and shows that there is more than just one extreme or the
other.
In my opinion, it is books and software like
this that are needed for children with autism. Books that teach
"the in-between" in a fun way... books that make a statement, then provide
the opposite... and then, provide the "in-between"... and in my opinion, the
more "in-betweens" provided, the better! :o)
There are many ways to show "in-betweens"... you
can do it with play dough to show big, bigger, biggest... and go a little
more in depths by showing for example, big, a little bigger, a
little bigger still, almost the biggest, the biggest. You can
really, in my opinion, do this with almost anything... spoons, twigs, rocks,
etc. and then apply the concept to more abstract things like "emotions" and
other aspects of life too where children have more difficulty. Once
the concrete is used to teach the concept, it is in my opinion, my easier to
teach the same concept in more abstract situations. :o)
|
Breaking The Code To Math!
(I'll be adding to this in sections as I get
through them)
Teaching Basic
Addition |
In teaching Zachary, I always try
to be conscious of the fact that he "lives by reference". As
such, I am of the opinion that he can not be taught basic addition the way
one would normally teach addition. Instead, references need to
be provided. There are also issues with short term memory that
I've noticed. Click on the link for this section for more on
that as well as for what I do to teach basic addition.
Note: I did begin to teach Zachary
basic addition and subtraction using my fingers... and that worked well for
him. What I'm talking about here is really getting to the "next
step"... past the "finger counting"... to teaching that there can be more
than one way to get a single answer. I never want to give
Zachary the impression that there is only ONE answer to a question.
Yes, at times there is just one answer, but, generally, there is more than
one way to get to the same answer.
For example, if I teach that 0+1 = 1.
That is true but, there is still more than one way to get to the answer 1
(although it is something that will come further down the road, and that
would involve "minuses"... for example, -1+2=1). Thus, in
teaching Zachary, I always try to "think ahead" and that means that I don't
want to teach him that there is only "one answer"... because in life, in
almost everything, there is always more than one answer. Given I
am of the opinion that these children live by reference, I always want to
make sure that the "concept for the formation of that reference" allows for
"flexibility" in arriving at an answer. :o) The idea
is to at least have Zachary be able to do all basic addition to the number
18... at the minimum from 0+0 = 0 to 9+9 = 18 and showing that you can have
"different ways" to get to that ONE answer too. My goal is to at least
get him to understand that you can get to the same answer different ways,
and to have him MASTER 0+0=0 to 9+9 = 18 in order to then move on to "carry
the one" type math. Of course, before I do "carry the
one", I'll be tackling subtraction... but, that will work much in the way I
do basic addition - teaching the "basics" and the fact that you can get the
same answer many ways. Once Zachary understands how "addition" and
"subtraction" fit together (i.e., 6+6 = 12, 12-6 = 6 because 6+6 = 12, etc.)
I'll then move on to "carry the one".
In working with Zachary, I also show him how to
"count by 10s, 5s, 2s" etc. When I count by 2s, I make sure I do
both even and odd numbers all the way to 100 or so. I'm just
doing these verbally for now, but, he is quick at picking up the pattern.
Just another aspect of basic addition that I'm starting to teach him because
it plays a role in so many other things.
I do the same thing with subtraction... I peg
the answer, not a variable within the equation. So, I may
pick the number 20 and show Zachary the many ways to "come up with 20" using
subtraction (i.e. 50-30 = 20, 49-29=20, all the way down).
The beauty of this approach was that it provided
"many answers" or "many ways to get the same thing" and it was flexible
enough to allow for future "expansion" in mathematics (i.e., getting into
the adding of negatives also, such as -10+11 = 1). That could
easily be done by simply "expanding the charts" at either end.
|
Teaching
Multiplication |
As I completed my 4th book - on language - a friend of
mine had loaned me a video she felt Zachary would absolutely love... it was
for teaching multiplication. Zachary had just turned 6 at the
time... and although I did not think he was ready for multiplication yet, I
figured I'd at least "expose him to it" via this video. Well... to
my surprise, after watching it a few time, Zachary started going around the
house reciting his multiplications. I couldn't believe it.
After watching this video about 15 times, he knew all his multiplication
tables, from 0 through 12! I had done nothing to teach him this
stuff other than explaining what "times" means. For that, I
simply gave him an example and said for example that 3x3 = 3+3+3 = 3 times
3. These videos make use of songs, colors and motions... all
things I knew were absolutely key for Zachary... and they teach the
"concept"... something too many materials today fail to do!
This wonderful video that taught Zachary all his multiplication tables
at age 6 was entitled: School House Rock Multiplication.
For those interested in this video... and this company has other good ones
such as Grammar Rock and Math Rock... 2 others I recently purchased...
here's the link:
http://www.school-house-rock.com/multiplicationrock.html
I guess the lesson in all this is that you can not underestimate your
child... and, if they are going to watch videos or television, they may as
well watch something educational that will actually teach them something!
|
Breaking The Code To Money!
Teaching Money (to view online click
on title above)
(to open as PDF file - go to
PDF link in this section) |
I provide the poster I came up with in sections in the
hope that parents can simply print the sections and cut/paste them together.
Also, there are numerous flash cards to teach both concepts and provide
practice too!
With money, although the poster I made provided the basic $1.00
equivalents (i.e., 4 quarters = 1.00, or 10 dimes = 1.00, or 20 nickels =
1.00, or 100 pennies = 1.00), there is a reason I do not provide that in the
cards. The reason is because if you just give "those
equivalents" as the basic ones, a child with autism, in my opinion, would
grasp those as the "critical reference" points and as such, may have a hard
time understanding that there are many more ways to make $1.00 using a
mixture of quarters, dimes, nickels and pennies. In my opinion,
I think it is better to provide the concept of the "mixture" and
give/emphasize the basic "references" after! You always
want to provide for the "in between" situation... and in the case of money,
that means "mixing up" the coins rather than just working with one type
because the "one type of coin" only provides for that "all or none" children
with autism so often get fixated on! :o)
This Is
ONLY
For Those Allowed To Use My Materials Based on
Terms Of Use
Conditions!
Open
File As PDF File To My Computer For Quick Downloading
Copy of Money
Poster
|
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GOOD RESOURCES ON THE WEB Internet Picture Dictionary...
Great resources to start providing basic labels for many, many things... |
http://www.handwritingforkids.com/handwrite/index.htm
(this one is really good... lots of great tools that can be downloaded for
free - this site links to a ton of other resource links providing teaching
materials online)
http://pdictionary.com/cgi-bin/browse.cgi?lang=&letter=a
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/DictionaryA.html
Picture systems can get rather expensive ... in our family,
we found that "I Spy" books were much better... they provided a TON of
pictures in just one book... and Zachary loved having all these different
things to look at. The mistake I think parents make is that they
think they need to "show pictures" of all these objects out there... but the
fact is... it is the lesson that everything has a name or label that is
critical... once a child gets that... in my opinion, there is no need for
all these "picture cards"... there are much more cost effective things to
use. We never really used picture cards... I just pointed to
things in our house and labeled them for Zachary. Read a whole lot
more on all these issues in my 4 books... posted in full on this website!
:o)
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