Showing posts with label sensory integration disorder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sensory integration disorder. Show all posts

Saturday, February 25, 2012

The New Language of Toys: Teaching Communication Skills to Children With Special Needs, a Guide for Parents and Teachers Review

The New Language of Toys: Teaching Communication Skills to Children With Special Needs, a Guide for Parents and Teachers
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This book has an over-reaching title and at best is a catalog that describes toys. Placing the words "special needs" in the title implies that it would provide specific pointers for helping children with all sorts and degrees of disabilities like CP, visual impairments, hearing impairments, deafblindness, mental retardation, etc. and might at least have a section on augmentative communications. It offers VERY LITTLE on these topics. As for the dialogues, I found them to be of poor quality and contrary to other stuff I have read. Some of the dialogues for a child who hasn't begun to talk have tons of words and lots of adjectives yet later the same book suggests that teaching the concepts of 'up' and 'down' in the same play session might be too confusing for the child. I don't know what the author's Ph.D. is in but I hope it isn't in speech and language pathology.

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(2004 iParenting Media Award Winner)Many young children with special needs experience language delays and need additional help to build language skills.What better way to encourage communication development than through play? The completely updated third edition of THE NEW LANGUAGE OF TOYS, a perennial favorite of parents, speech-language pathologists, and early interventionists, offers a plan for doing just that.
The new edition presents sixty-five new toys and accompanying toy dialogs to use with children with a wide range of special needs from birth through age six.These sample toy dialogs show parents how to play purposefully with their child--using store-bought and homemade toys--to provide language learning opportunities and stimulate language development.The exercises are fun and educational, too, as parents help their child build receptive language skills (understanding), expressive language skills (communicating), and speech.
THE NEW LANGUAGE OF TOYS is organized by language developmental ages and each section includes:toy dialogs; numerous photographs; a toy list; a list of suggested vocabulary and communication concepts; children's book bibliography; a checklist to track progress.
In addition, this book provides important background information about language, its sequential development, the causes of language delays, and how play can enhance language development.It also explains the use of videos, DVDs, television, and the computer as language enhancers.The resource lists are extensive, offering toy manufacturers and catalogs, support organizations, children's book information, and suggested materials for homemade toys.
With THE NEW LANGUAGE OF TOYS, parents can help their children make gains in their language development and have an enjoyable and rewarding experience while doing it.It's also a great tool for collaboration between parents and professionals.

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Wednesday, January 4, 2012

Your Child's Hearing Loss: A Guide for Parents Review

Your Child's Hearing Loss: A Guide for Parents
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
My daughter, almost 3 years, has been profoundly deaf since birth. She has bilateral Cochlear Implants and we are so grateful for how far the Lord has brought technology! I just got a copy of this book when my daughter was two and a half. It would have been THE perfect book to read when we found out my daughter was deaf. The author, Debby Waldman, encompasses the emotions perfectly that a parent goes through upon diagnosis of their child's hearing loss, because she herself has a daughter with hearing loss. With her knowledge and personal experience, combined with the professional and medical experience of her co-author, Dr. Jackson Roush, this is a MUST-READ for any parent whether they have recently found out about their childs' hearing loss or have journeyed with it for 20 years.

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From a mother whose daughter has hearing loss, and an audiologist with more than thirty years experience with deaf and hard-of-hearing children and their families, this comprehensive volume offers parents critical information on everything from technical information to practical and emotional support. Among the subjects covered are causes of hearing loss; testing and assessment; technical advances in hearing aids, FM systems, and cochlear implants; the role of specialists including audiologists, otolaryngologists, geneticists, and speech-language pathologists; advocating for your child's welfare in educational, social, and public environments; and practical solutions to everyday problems. Although aimed primarily at parents, it will also be useful to students and to professionals who work with children who have hearing loss, as it provides a window to the world of hearing loss from a family perspective.

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