We began our rainy Wednesday with sensory diets, integration, ring toss, Stacks, and Christmas dancing! Sensory diets are so important for regulation, auditory processing skills, teamwork, social skills, sportsmanship, motor planning, body mapping, sequencing, gross motor skills, proprioception skills, vestibular and bilateral movements, and balance and coordination. Play is also important for creativity, language arts and communication skills, mathematics skills, role-play and drama, fine motor skills, teamwork, and social skills. Ring toss is a great tool to work on our fine and gross motor skills, visual spatial awareness, hand-eye coordination, accuracy, turn taking, sportsmanship, and math skills.
Ring Toss
Sensory Diet with Mr. Dean
Stacks- a great fine motor, bilateral movement, team building, hand-eye, visual spatial, and math game.
Mental Blocks- Carter and Mr. Dean are working on patterns, visual spatial skills, problem solving, abstract thinking, fine motor skills, hand-eye coordination, 2D and 3D shapes, auditory processing, and number sense and numeracy.
Rock Star!
Here we are practicing our Christmas Play! Due to absences and integration we only had three friends perform, but they did amazing. They remembered all of the dance moves and worked on timing and rhythm, gross motor skills, bilateral movements, auditory processing, and team work!
In gym class today we played scooter European Hand Ball. It was so much fun and everyone demonstrated great upper body strength, core strength, teamwork, social skills, social problem solving skills, sportsmanship, motor planning, body mapping, sequencing, gross motor skills, proprioception skills, vestibular and bilateral movements, and balance and coordination.
In Mindfulness today we practiced being calm, still, and focusing on our breathing and heart beat. All of our friends were so attentive, focused, determined, and calm while working on their breathing, body awareness and body mapping, regulation, and flexibility.
In the afternoon we had two friends participate in the Art Reach program while the rest of us played Race Car Phonics! We had to demonstrate turn taking, letter sounds and recognition, blending and segmenting sounds, and reading and writing words.
At the every end of the day we used our gross motor skills, bilateral movements, and time and rhythm to practice our Christmas Play songs!
Lastly, we went over our Zones of Regulation and used different coloured blocks to symbolize how our day was, and how different times of the day went. We also got to share our own ideas and thoughts on how our day went, and took turns saying one nice thing about our friends from today's work.
HOMEWORK:
To go over some of our favourite items/toys/clothes/photos/etc. and take a photo of them, develop the photos (Walmart has instant printing for 10 cents a photo), put them in a scrap book, and then write the date and year you got them, why, from where, from who, what it is, etc. During our Show & Tell all of us are having difficulties putting a specific place and time on our objects. Keeping a scrap book (journal log) of our items, toys, and memories will help us make connections, links, and begin to comprehend time and make the connections between past, present, and future events in our lives. This should be an ongoing project for the remainder of the year and then can continue on throughout the following years as well! Have fun with it and get creative!
Spend 15 minutes reading a book of your child's choice, a cartoon, instructions, recipe, comic strip, etc. Make reading fun, engaging, an adventure, and not a boring chore. You can also have your child create their own picture story book using the 5-Finger Retell Model.
Work on money skills at home and out in the community. Have your child make their own shop, store, etc. at home using real items/foods. Price out items, look online for comparable prices, and then use real money (5 cents to 2 dollar coins) to make specific amounts, for example, have your child show you how to make $1.80 out of nickels, dimes, and quarters.
Mr. Jacob : )
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