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Engineering the Classroom for Communication Susan Drysdale, M.Ed., M.A., CCC-SLP 2007-2008 School Year

Engineering the Classroom for Communication

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Engineering the Classroom for Communication. Susan Drysdale, M.Ed., M.A., CCC-SLP 2007-2008 School Year. CAIU MDS Class Camp Hill HS. Susan Way, M. Special Ed., teacher. Dedicated to the STAFF & STUDENTS who made this possible. Engineering the Classroom. Involves… - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Engineering the Classroomfor Communication

Susan Drysdale, M.Ed., M.A., CCC-SLP

2007-2008 School Year

Page 2: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

CAIU MDS ClassCamp Hill HS

Susan Way, M. Special Ed., teacher

Page 3: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Dedicated to the STAFF & STUDENTS who made this possible

Page 4: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Engineering the Classroom

• Involves…– delineating, prioritizing, & preparing classroom

environments to facilitate language development, communication & literacy

– providing access to materials & technology including AAC devices & AT equipment for all students

– using teaching techniques/strategies• Aided language stimulation• least-to-most prompting• choice making

• Engineered classrooms…– are especially beneficial for nonverbal students &/or

students with multiple disabilities; verbal students can also benefit

– require considerable planning to design & create

Page 5: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

What Are Some of the Needs?

Page 6: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Beginning of the Year

Page 7: Engineering the Classroom for Communication
Page 8: Engineering the Classroom for Communication
Page 9: Engineering the Classroom for Communication
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Needs Assessment Tool

• Teacher completed• Identified

– class needs– staff needs

• 2 areas of focus selected– provide students means to

improve comprehension of structured learning/work activities/tasks

– Teacher/staff learn/use no-tech communication strategies & materials (e.g., schedules, picture communication systems, boards/overlays)

Page 12: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Engineering the Classroom for CURRENT needs…

Page 13: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

What Would We Provide?

• Visually-based materials– Communication boards– Communication books– Sentence starters flip chart

• Aided language stimulation technique• Access to technology including

– AAC devices– AT equipment– Computer

• Organization & flexibility of physical space

Page 14: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Mid-Year Milestones

Page 15: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

On-site Training

Page 16: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

AAC to Gain Attention

Page 17: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

AAC for Peer Interaction

Page 18: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Using Excel for Spelling

Page 19: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Communication Board to Aid

Expressive Language

Page 20: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Number Board to Aid Comprehension

Page 21: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Communication Book to Aid

Expressive Language

Page 22: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

End of the Year

Page 23: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Communication Boardto Aid

Expressive Language

Page 24: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

AAC Device to Aid Comprehension

Page 25: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Sentence Starters Flip Chart to Aid Comprehension

Page 26: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Peer Photos to Aid Comprehension

Page 27: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

AAC Device to Communicate Needs

Page 28: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Using Intellikeys to Access Excel for Spelling

Page 29: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

AAC to SupportGroup Activity

Page 30: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Communication Boardto Aid

Expressive Language

Page 31: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

AAC Device to Aid Comprehension

Page 32: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Needs Assessment Revisited

Teacher Completed in May, 2008

Page 33: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

What Were Student Gains?

• Provided with… – means to participate &

communicate– access to materials &

technology equipment

• Improved language skills– receptive language– expressive language

• Increased peer/staff social communication interactions

• Enhanced self-esteem

Page 34: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

How Did the Staff Benefit?

• Learned how to… – prepare/use visually-based materials

• communication boards & displays• communication books• sentence starters flip chart• digital photos/graphics

– provide some group activities for all or most students to participate & communicate

– use …• AAC devices/AT equipment• Aided language stimulation technique

• Improved organization, flexibility, & creative use of limited physical space

Page 35: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

What Do We Know?• On-site training is essential & applied immediately

– software– AAC devices– AT equipment– computer access– design & preparation of materials

• Consultation with staff must be ongoing• Preparation takes planning well in advance• Time & effort needed to engineer the classroom• Students…

– are more focused– better able to participate & communicate– have more opportunities to interact with staff & peers

Page 36: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Plans for 2008-2009

• Needs assessment completed early in September– Identify 2-3 areas of focus– Schedule regular on-site trainings based on staff needs

• Design & prepare materials far in advance of planned activities/tasks

• Purchase/create electronic materials accessible to all students– Books/adapted books– Games & puzzles– Activities (e.g., art, music, reading, math)

• Organize & share materials

Page 37: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

CAIU Professional Staff

Susan Drysdale, SLPJean Mulligan, Vision SpecialistSusan Way, MDS Teacher

Alecia Staley, B.A., TSSKeystone Human Services

Other Professional Staff

Page 38: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Kathy BrechbeilMary BuchananMarie Lewis

Paraprofessional Staff

Page 39: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

John AhernLaura DeArment (transferred 01/25/08)

William DudleyGlenn FullerPhillip HenryJustin LingenfelterHarry SpilkerQuentin Tyler

CAIU Students

Page 40: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

andCamp Hill HS students who provided

support to CAIU students

Page 41: Engineering the Classroom for Communication

Now we can begin Engineering the Classroom

for FUTURE needs…