Monday, August 16, 2010

Resource of the week: Mr. Potato Head

He may seem like just an ordinary guy but Mr. Potato Head has a secret. He is the life of the party in so many clinics, homes and schools around the world. He has proven to be extremely useful so far as a valuable resource for speech and language intervention. Therefore he gains the title of "Resource of the Week!" I thought I'd share with you readers 4 different ways in which I used good old Mr. PH today in my therapy sessions.

Case 1: child with autism, teaching imitation skills as well as building vocab for body parts and clothing.

It's good to have more than one Mr. Potato Head with matching items so you can do this type of activity. I put each part on while naming it, and he was required to choose the item from his pile and copy me. (saying the part on imitation was a bonus, which he achieved a few times). This also required lots of active looking to achieve. He required prompting by dad for the first 2 or so but he quickly caught on and the activity went well :)

Case 2: child with cochlear implant, in aural rehab session

I've used Mr. PH with him in earlier sessions for his conditioned response to Ling sounds, however this week was to listen for body parts. I got him to search for the body part when said, then when he found it match it to his own body part. I also provided lots of auditory input for "sh", saying pushhhhhhh whenever he was fitting an item.

Case 3: Child with language delay, working on following directions

I saw my supervisor do this once and fell in love with the activity. This was somewhat a test of all of the concepts we had learnt over the past few weeks in therapy. Activity involved:
  • Following 2 step directions: first put his eyes on, then one ear
  • Directions with before and after: after you put on an ear, put on his hat
  • Either....or constructions: put on either his teeth or his nose
  • Negation: which hand is not on?

I must say he worked so well on this task. I've had trouble before, finding ways to target these specific areas, so good job Potato dude!

Case 4: child with weak Phonological Awareness skills: Rhyming task

Now this was a fun way to end the day, trying to find all of Mr. PH's body parts, clothing items that rhymed. It went a bit like this :

  • Say hose, now find his........(nose)
  • Say pat, now find his.....(hat) etc.

Then I turned it around and let him tell me the rhyming word so I could find the body parts etc. This was a bit more difficult for him but with lots of prompting he got through it.

Great sessions all around.

And that my friends is how Mr. Potato Head saved the day!

1 comment:

  1. Great activity suggestions! I especially like the one for phonological awareness!

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