A Simple Tissue Paper Tree Project

26 Nov

Do you need a simple project for the winter season?  This tree was made  by  my students and completed during  one 20 minute therapy session.  Students at  all   grade levels seemed to enjoy making them.  They also made a good  bulletin board that was culturally sensitive for this time of year.  I added the silhouettes to discuss winter sports and the word silhouette.

Tissue Paper Tree

Tissue Paper Tree Art Project

I targeted quite a few goals with this project.  As usual, I used the app StoryKit to make the directions.  My articulation and older students began by sequencing and taking pictures. They recorded the directions using their best articulation skills.  My language students targeted vocabulary such as stencil, limbs, triangle, around, and tree trunk.  My language processing students listened to the directions and followed them in the correct sequence.

Tissue paper trees.

You can get the pattern for the stencil  here.

The storykit directions are here.  I removed the verbal directions because of student confidentiality.

A Little Black Crow Project for Following Directions

17 Oct

crow bulletin boardI found a pattern for these darling little black crows on Pinterest  and adapted them as a project for my speech therapy students.   Crows and sunflowers just seem to naturally go together and I am all for getting as much use of my bulletin board as I can without completely redoing it.

This project met my requirements for a speech therapy project.  The directions were fairly easy and the project could be completed within a 20 minute time frame. I could expand the project to include multiple speech goals.  Most of the materials were available from our school materials closet and were easy to obtain.

Preparation was minimal.  I used the die cut to cut out black circles and yellow triangles from construction paper.   I have younger students who have a lot of trouble cutting and this consumes more time than I have.  You could have students trace circles around a cover and cut them out.   I had left over googly eyes from the dollar store and already had paper fasteners in the store room.  A hole punch and glue sticks were other things I already had.  Making the circles and triangles were the only thing that took preparation time.

I expanded this project to include most of my students. Incorporating the free app Storykit opens up a lot of possibilities.  My language groups worked on sequencing  the directions. They took the pictures to make a logical sequence and wrote some of the instructions.  This also took some communication and collaboration as students agreed on what pictures to take, how to place the materials and what the direction should be 1st and 2nd etc.

My groups working on sounds in spontaneous speech created the verbal directions to go with the pictures. They listened to their recordings and decided if they needed to record again to improve their production.  The school confidentiality regulations didn’t allow me to keep their recordings  for publishing so you ended up with my lovely voice instead. My students listening enjoyed figuring out who was speaking when they were listening to the directions.

My younger students who are working on following directions and positional vocabulary followed the directions to create their crow.  Concept words included whole/half, center, top, and through. It was interesting to see which students followed the directions for the fasteners or tried to use the glue stick instead.  My students really loved the idea of the movable wings and posed them for the bulletin board.  I had some students who could not part with their bird, so they didn’t end up on the board.  Hopefully they took them home and explained how they were made to someone in their family.

The directions were published on Storykit.  Click on the bird button below and you will see them.  When you use this app the directions are made in a storybook format.  When it is published it comes into your email like a story board.  The app can be found at storkit@childrenlibrary.org.  I did not find it through the app store.

crow button

It’s Good to Be Back Bulletin Board

31 Aug

Back to school sunflowers

School is finally starting in the Pacific Northwest.  We have a late start here compared to other regions of the United States..  I am returning to my main school from last year and adding a  new charter school as well.  The charter school has middle school students so I may get a little more variety this year with the age range. I have had middle school students in the past and enjoy working with this age group.  It is always fun to hear about the latest fads.

I needed a new bulletin board for back to school night and the start of school.  I decided to make something  that would be able to switch to the Fall season.  That happens pretty quickly so  back to school doesn’t stay up very long.  The bee is our school mascot so I have handy bee note papers.  I decided the slogan “It’s good to be back”  would be a nice  play on words. Bees go with flowers and sunflowers are a common Fall flower. That all led me to this video on how to make sunflowers.  It turned out  to be  a fairly simple flower to make. You can click on the title to get the directions.

Sunflower How to Vdeo

Sometimes dog walks give you a good appreciation of nature  and nature gives free material for crafts.  On a dog walk I noticed that the back end of pine cones look similar to the center of the sunflower. I clipped off the end of some pine cones and glued them to the center of my flowers.  Mine turned out to look like this.

20150827_185038 (1)

I added some green construction paper leaves.  There you have a sunflower bulletin board that didn’t take long to make at all.   I am sure students would enjoy making the sunflowers.  It may be worthy of a nature walk if you have trees with pine cones nearby.

 

 

Butterfly Paper Folding / Bulletin Board

7 Apr

butterfly bulletin boardIt is Spring here in the Northwest.  Many of the classes use butterflies for instruction on the cycle of life. They watch caterpillars form cocoons and develop into butterflies.  I found directions for folding paper butterflies on Pinterest.   They made a good activity for my bulletin board and a direction following activity.  It also helped to reinforce what was happening  in classrooms. Here is a picture of the bulletin board.

The directions were fairly simple and could be completed within a  20 minute time frame.  I added pipe cleaner  antennae.  The students just bent a pipe cleaner in half and wrapped the ends around their fingers a couple of times. They then stapled it to the top.

These directions really reinforced the concept of half.  We also talked about parts of a butterfly.  I was surprised to find my students didn’t know what antennae were.

I couldn’t make better directions then what were already posted here.  There are easy to follow directions  on  goorigami.com.  I just put them up on my iPad.

 

Have a Heart

9 Feb

valentine flowerProgress reports are in and it is time to get back to planning for therapy.  February is a short month so it goes by quickly.  I find I still need to keep things simple for my younger folk.  We dressed the bulletin board up with heart animals.  This activity was more open-ended then the ones I have done in the past.  I used a die cut to cut a variety of hearts in different sizes and colors. They used sequins for the eyes.  Students were told  to put the hearts together to form an animal.  I showed them a few pictures from Pinterest and then they were on their own.  It was hard for them to get started.  When they found they could try pieces out 1st before gluing they got a little more adventurous.  It was a good opportunity to practice social skills to ask for tools and materials. We have worked a lot on sequencing and this activity required them to think about the order of gluing.   I also listened to my articulation  students to see how they were progressing with their spontaneous speech. Quite a few of my students decided to take them home to give for Valentine’s Day.

They came up with a good variety of animals.

20150209_155652