And farm animals are always fun, and we have so many versions of them-Little People, vintage Fisher Price, puzzles, books, puppets, etc. so it is easy to expose Peter to lots of repetition of the same sounds in different ways. The following video has times where Peter isn't saying anything, but I kept the wait time to show a little about how much I have to model and how long I have to wait. Any signs in the video are spontaneous.
Giving Peter a world of words: Finding a path to languages and literacy for my deaf son
Saturday, October 5, 2013
Animal fun
A couple videos to show what we have been working on. We are giving everything a sound, and labeling sounds. One example is saying "walk, walk, walk" when moving a toy. We have used the phrase at home with animals, and in speech therapy with Mr. Potato Head. And here is what happened:
And farm animals are always fun, and we have so many versions of them-Little People, vintage Fisher Price, puzzles, books, puppets, etc. so it is easy to expose Peter to lots of repetition of the same sounds in different ways. The following video has times where Peter isn't saying anything, but I kept the wait time to show a little about how much I have to model and how long I have to wait. Any signs in the video are spontaneous.
And farm animals are always fun, and we have so many versions of them-Little People, vintage Fisher Price, puzzles, books, puppets, etc. so it is easy to expose Peter to lots of repetition of the same sounds in different ways. The following video has times where Peter isn't saying anything, but I kept the wait time to show a little about how much I have to model and how long I have to wait. Any signs in the video are spontaneous.
Labels:
ASL,
Cochlear Implant,
Speech Therapy,
Video
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