Posts in Communication Works: Blog
Don’t Forget to Fill Your Pitcher and Make Self-Care a Priority in the New Year!

While making your list of New Year’s resolutions, remember to build in time for self-care. As educators, therapists, or parents—especially when supporting those with special needs—our day-to-day lives can be stressful and focused on meeting the needs of other people over ourselves. There’s a good reason for the statement, “Put on your own oxygen mask…

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Tools to Try: Barrier Games

We recently asked our therapists about their favorite resources for building speech, language, and social communication skills.  Jennifer Wayman’s pick was Barrier Games, which can be easily used at home, in the classroom, and in therapy sessions to provide a fun and useful way to easily tailor goals and objectives to your child’s needs. Barrier Games…

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Tools to Try: Pixar Short Films

Recently we asked our therapists to recommend resources for building speech,  language, and social communication skills. We wanted to share some of these activities that parents, teachers and other therapists may find fun and useful and that can be easily tailored for specific children’s needs.  Therapist Kevin English recommended using Pixar short films (or any…

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A Time to Reflect

by Jillian LeVos-Carlson, M.S., CCC-SLP I recently attended my company’s end-of-year party, where we were encouraged to reflect on the recent school year and think of the growth and challenges we’d experienced and what we’d learned and might want to store in our memory for the future. The first thing that came to mind was…

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Tools to Try: Jenga

Our therapists often adapt commonly used games as tools for building speech, language, and social communication skills. We wanted to share some of these activities that teachers and caregivers may find fun and useful and that can be easily tailored for specific children’s needs. The first is Jenga, recommended by CW therapist Theresa Christiansen. Jenga…

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Metacognition and Self-Regulation

As adults, we spend an extraordinary amount of time thinking we’ve got our students’ and children’s problems figured out: “I know why he’s mad…it’s because he can’t get the Legos to fit together!” “She must be sulking because her friends left her out during recess today” Grown ups certainly have more life experience than kids, and sometimes…

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Strategies for Bullying

By Hanna Bogen, M.S., CCC-SLP When hanging out with friends, we may joke, act silly, or sometimes tease one another. While these actions can start out as playful, the teasing can sometimes become unfriendly and turn into bullying. Knowing when you or a friend’s actions are turning into bullying behavior can be challenging. First, let’s…

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Feed Your Body, Feed Your Brain

By Hanna Bogen, M.S., CCC-SLP “Back to school” time means back to packing lunches and sifting through snacks. One critical pillar of the development of self-regulation skills is sub-cortical regulation: management of sleep, movement, hydration, and eating. When you feed your body healthy foods, you are simultaneously feeding your brain. If children don’t eat a sufficient…

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Treating the Whole Child

By Hanna Bogen, M.S., CCC-SLP Picture this: a child loses his temper during a math lesson at school and rips up his homework assignment at the end of the lesson. In an effort to provide support, his teacher assumes the math is too hard and modifies his assignment to be shorter and less complex. Meanwhile,…

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The Rhythm of Conversation

By Lee-Anne Bloom, M.S., OTR/L, with Elizabeth Sautter, M.A., CCC-SLP As an occupational therapist who focuses on supporting an individual’s occupations, I am thrilled to work at Communication Works, where we support the whole person and an important job/occupation that he/she has– to regulate, communicate and connect with others. Without the ability to self-regulate and…

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