Comments on: “Games” and Speech/Language Therapy http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html Speech therapy with a twist! Mon, 29 Apr 2019 15:52:01 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.25 By: Situations Blog http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-31070 Wed, 21 Jun 2017 16:30:53 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-31070 Super Duper Difficult Situations Fun Deck

[…] te the number of the space each student is on on their data sheets. Then, we can […]

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By: Situations Blog http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-30550 Sat, 18 Feb 2017 05:18:11 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-30550 Super Duper Difficult Situations Fun Deck Cards

[…] ts. Then, we can pick up in the same spot the next time we have therapy. Some ti […]

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By: Lauren http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-30371 Fri, 20 Jan 2017 15:33:50 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-30371 Great game suggestions! One game I haven’t seen mentioned that my middle school kids love is Worst Case Scenario. It uses a lot of vocabulary the kids are unfamiliar with as well as multisyllabic words for arctic practice (I work with deaf and hard of hearing kids). Also, Jenga, Blurt!, and my personal favorite- Hiss (I wrote word lists for practice on the backs of the cards), also Word on the Street (good for spelling and categories). The one thing I use more than anything else for arctic is a box of playing cards from Linguisystems which has pictures targeting different speech sounds on each deck. We play crazy 8, go fish, etc.

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By: Languages Blog http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-30304 Thu, 29 Dec 2016 17:48:01 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-30304 Super Duper Pirate Talk Receptive Expressive Language Game Board

[…] the next time we have therapy. Some times it takes a few sessions, but my studen […]

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By: Judith http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-17306 Sun, 22 Feb 2015 17:17:44 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-17306 I use bunches of games! One is what I call The Waiter Game, ( Ideals Don’t Tip the Waiter). I made menus of the meals and kids have to request foods. I use it for requesting,politely, I have the kids ask each other. I use carrier phrases. I use it to work on pronouns. I also use it a lot with autistic kids as well as MR. I provide prompt sentences for them using Boardmaker and more often Pixwriter to encourage independence. We work on dinner conversation; things to talk about, what to say, how to answer.

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By: Lisa and Kennedy http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-706 Wed, 18 Dec 2013 15:46:31 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-706 PS – had to say I also would put Cariboo at the top of my list and Pop-Up Pirate – it never gets old! When my daughter had speech and an itinerant DHH teacher as a young girl (she’s now 16) she loved these so much we bought our own and I still use them with my students to this day and it’s been about 12 years since we first purchased them. I would say these two are top – oh and a good Barrel of Monkeys (the thick ones if you can find them).

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By: Lisa and Kennedy http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-705 Wed, 18 Dec 2013 15:42:53 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-705 I use Strawberry Land http://www.ebay.com/itm/Strawberryland-Strawberry-Short-Cake-Hide-and-Seek-Board-Game-/171192983235 (little girls love it) – mostly as a reinforcer after they take their turn with whatever language/artic goal we are working on but also possessive pronouns – when they flip a card over and the item belongs to the other person’s character – “Oh that’s YOURS, it’s NOT MINE”, etc. if you have multiple people, it can be HERS, HIS, etc. I also use Candy Land and Snakes & Ladders a lot for reinforcing turns with language/artic goals. Games like these are always great for reinforcing things like who is ‘ahead’ who is ‘behind’ or ‘in the lead’, etc. I also recently got “Take the Cake” http://www.gamewright.com/gamewright/index.php?section=games&page=game&show=248, which I have used for shapes, colors vocab, matching – same/different, also auditory memory with multiple elements when you play with the cards and ask the other person for the items you need that are on your card, etc.

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By: Maria Hernandez http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-701 Mon, 09 Dec 2013 13:11:09 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-701 I am maria Hernadez From USA, all the topics are very nice. I want to share my experience about Voice Therapy.Anyone can visit my site:
http://www.speechlanguagetherapy.in

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By: Kitty Nelson http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-603 Thu, 06 Jun 2013 04:12:26 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-603 I have this Spongebob board game book that my kids NEVER get tired of & I just have a zillion cards I can do anything with it. UNO is my fave for artic, I make kids say the color & number & “skip you back to me” & so on. Any suggestions on games that maybe promote “social skills” besides the obvious?

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By: Anna Maria http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-439 Wed, 13 Feb 2013 17:44:40 +0000 http://sublimespeech.com/2013/02/games-and-speechlanguage-therapy.html#comment-439 Nice article, thanks for the information.
Anna @ sewa mobil jakarta

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