Showing posts with label Morning Meeting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Morning Meeting. Show all posts

3 Easy Ways to Implement AAC at Morning Meeting



Looking for ways to incorporate more AAC into your daily classroom routines? I have three quick and easy ways you can incorporate AAC into your morning meeting that are meaningful and functional. Whether you have high tech devices or low tech, these three ideas can help your students communicate and participate in an engaging morning meeting. Don't have access to high-tech AAC? No problem, I have included some ideas for low-tech ways to introduce these concepts into your morning meeting. Check out these three simple ideas:

1. Attendance Check-In 


Have students check into the classroom once they arrive in the morning. Once everyone gathers for morning meeting, ask students if they are "here" or "at home". Phrasing your questions as "yes" and "no" questions is a great way to work on language skills! Once students are able to answer questions about themselves, move on to peers. Some quick examples of how you can phrase your questions: 

"Are you at home today Bobby?" 
"Shane, are you at school today?" 
"Kira, is Bobby here today?" 

High tech: Use yes/no on a tech talk device, buttons, or your choice of AAC device. Model first, then let students answer independently as they start to grasp the concept. 


Low tech: Use yes/no icons on popsicle sticks, Use icons on a choice board, or create a chart for answering yes/no questions where students can clip their answer choice. 


2. Greeting Peers



The first thing we do when we sit down for morning meeting is greet each other. I created this tech-talk slide of pictures of our classroom. It has easily become the best part of our morning.  Each student gets to pick a friend to say "good morning" to. We practice social skills by saying "good morning" back to the peer that chose them. It's a great way to practice social skills, manners and engage the kids in peer communication.  My class loves this part of our day. The smiles they give each other when they hear their name on the device melts my heart every day. 

High tech: Create a slide of student pictures. Record "good morning, (insert student name)!" on their picture. When the student chooses a friend, and touches the device it will say "good morning, Bobby!" I then pass the device to "Bobby" and he will practice saying it back. Not only are we practicing communication, but we are practicing identifying our friends in the classroom and increasing accuracy on selections. 

Low tech: Create a picture board and have students point to who they want to greet. Create a velcro board where students can pull of the picture of a peer and hand it to them to say good morning. 

3. Attendance Count 


I know I have talked about my leveled step-by-step communicator a lot, but it seriously has been the best thing I've come across for math instruction in my classroom. I had no idea how to teach non-verbal children how to count, well, with this device they absolutely can! It is worth the investment in my opinion. 

After students have checked-in and greeted each other, they help me with my attendance count. We use a chart on our smart board to see who is here at school and who is at home. We count how many people are here and then each student will count to that number. We pass the device and pair it with a number line (hello visuals!) and we count how many students we have at school that day. I started this routine by doing hand over hand and errorless learning. My paraprofessionals would help move the hand across the number line as I helped the student press the button to count. We are at the point in our learning where the students no longer need hand-over-hand assistance and they are pretty accurate with counting! Another tip is to teach the students to take their hand OFF the button when they are done counting, that way you know when they are finished. This takes multiple times of using hand over hand assistance with errorless learning. 

High tech: Get yourself a step-by-step communicator by ablenet! Record however high you want to count and use modeling and hand over hand assistance until students start understanding the idea. I recommend recording passed the number you have in your classroom. For example, I have 6 students so my button counts to 10. If a student isn't getting the concept of counting, they will continue to just press the button. This is where teaching them to take their hand off the button is important. 


Low tech: Use a number line to count using the same method as the device. Have students "touch" numbers on the number line for how many are in the classroom that day. You could also create a velcro number line and have students peel off and hand numbers (similar to PECS).  

So there you have it! Three super simple, super quick ideas that you can implement in your morning meeting tomorrow! Okay, well maybe not literally tomorrow, but maybe next week! Happy SPED prepping--- get those kids communicating!
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Morning Meeting



Morning meeting is one of my favorite parts of our day! I love that it is so structured, consistent and it gets us started on the right track. When I switched over to teaching more severe students, I was worried that I wasn't going to be able to incorporate a lot into my morning meetings. In the past, we had a large hands-on calendar binder that the students used to follow along with me. When I whipped out those bad boys this year, I was like "whoa, this is not going to work" that binder may have worked for me in the past, but with this new group of kiddos I needed to cut it down. I had to totally re-structure my morning meeting and I am so pleased with the outcome! Here is our morning meeting schedule:

Student Check-In

When my students arrive in the morning, they unpack their things, and do some type of name work whether that be matching the letter in their name, typing their name on their label-makers, or practice writing it on the lines (if you'd like to see more on how I differentiate name writing, visit my instagram page! I did a post and videos of our name activities). Once those are turned in, the students "check-in" on my interactive white board. They drag their name to "here". Then they have 10 minutes of free sensory play. Why do I start their day out with sensory play? I have found that it makes transition for my students easier, and it also takes some students longer than others to complete activities. I set the timer, and when the timer beeps the students will sit down at our group table and our morning meeting begins. I pull up the "check-in" board and we talk about who is here and who is not here. We count the students in each category, we find the numbers (given a choice of 2) and then hang them on the board. We also use this time to say good morning and I like to use their AAC devices to ask them yes/no questions about students that are present or absent.



 Morning Check-In on our Interactive Whiteboard 


Here/ Not Here 

Interactive Calendar 

After we have decided how many students are at school, we go on to our interactive calendar. I use the boardmaker studio program to make my interactive calendar. Students will come up to the board and we will "cross off" the days that we have been at school. Once we complete that, we talk about any special days that month, which special we will have that day (art, music, gym, technology). Then we find what day it is on our interactive calendar. After we find the day, we sing our days of the week song and use sign language. One of my students is highly motivated by music, so we use this to keep him actively engaged. My students are starting to pick up on the signs, and it's amazing to see them "singing" along! 


Interactive Calendar Template 
(Boardmaker Studio)

Weather Check 

After calendar, we check the temperature. I move the arrow for my older students to see on the temperature gage if the weather is hot, warm, cool, or cold. We discuss this orally and then we have a friend check the weather by looking out our window. The friend will tell us what the weather is like, and then we dress Joey for the day! I use a file folder system to store all of Joey's pieces and use my choice board to give selections to the students. Once Joey is dressed, we move on to a more hands-on calendar. 


Temperature Guide and Joey the Weather Guy from Unique Learning System


Choice Board 

Simple Hands-On Calendar

I re-invented my calendar from my larger calendar book set, to a more simplified version. In our simple version, we are working on finding the day, month, weather,  and temperature. I have been slowing adding more skills to this calendar, and this is where we are currently but we still have "yesterday was" and "tomorrow will be" to add. I think this will be a hard topic for my students. When using this simple calendar, I give my students a choice of 2 using our choice board. We love the choice board!


I put my calendar in a 2" inch binder for ease of use 







Last year, I used the more advanced version of this calendar book for my learners. Here are some picks below of how I set that one up and the link to the resource. I have recently updated this version to have better fonts, graphics and a cleaner looking design. I also added American Sign Language options for teachers using ASL to teach days of the week. Each student had one of these calendar books to follow along!





Here is a picture of the updated version. 


Music 

After we complete the calendar, I use youtube to project videos of various songs. We sing more days of the week songs to work on sign language. We also sing a song called "one little finger" every day. My hope was to get the students involved in doing the hand motions to the song. At first it was a lot of hand over hand, but now the students are catching on and participating in the hand motions. We also will sing songs that have to do with our core-vocabulary words. 



Walking Walking  (a sample of a song I would use for core vocab word "STOP"

Adapted Books

After we have completed all of the music activities I introduce our daily adapted book. I am really focusing hard on using adapted books that are related to the science and social studies content I am currently instructing. This has pushed me to create some of my own supplemental adapted books and to think outside the box. When reading the books, I use my choice board to display picture options to students about the books. We will use AAC devices to answer questions about the books. After we have read the story, we have reached about our 30 minute maximum. My students are antsy, need restroom breaks, and some even transition to gen ed.  If you are interested in more themed adapted books, check out my instagram page. I share videos of our monthly adapted books. Look for them in my highlighted stories. 


This is how morning meeting looks in our classroom! How do you do morning meeting?

 
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