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Visual Supports in the Classroom. Melissa Chase Donna Williams June, 2008. Visual Tools Mini Test. Do you have a calendar that you write things on to help you organize? Do you have a list of “things to do” on your desk or refrigerator?
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Visual Supports in the Classroom Melissa Chase Donna Williams June, 2008
Visual Tools Mini Test • Do you have a calendar that you write things on to help you organize? • Do you have a list of “things to do” on your desk or refrigerator? • Have you ever pointed to a picture in an advertisement or a menu to show someone what you want? • Do you make up ashopping listbefore you go to the store?
Visual Tools Mini Test, cont. • Do you ever read from a sign to tell you what line to stand in or what door to exit from? • Have you ever followed a recipe in a cookbook to create some delicious dinner entrée? Did you go back to that recipe each time you wanted to cook that item? • Do you ever write notes to your family members reminding them to do things?
Visual Tools Mini Test, cont. • Do you scan the menu to evaluate your choices before ordering in a restaurant? • Have you ever made a check list for your children to help them remember to brush their teeth? • Did you ever attach a note to your bathroom mirror to remind you to do something?
Visual Tools Mini Test, cont. • Have you had the experience of assembling a new bicycle by following the “easy to follow step by step” instructions?
What are visual tools? • Simply put, visual supports are a way of making auditory information visual. • Students with autism and students who are visual learners need visual supports…but most of our students would benefit from them.
What is a visual strategy? According to Linda Hodgdon, a visual is: • Body Language • Natural Environment Clues • Tools for Organizing and Giving Information
Visual supports come in many forms…. • Written words • Pictures: photos, color pictures, black and white pictures, picture-symbols like those used in the Mayer Johnson Boardmaker program • Gestures • Objects in the environment: i.e. supplies that are needed for the next activity are sitting on the table or desk where that activity will occur: • Arrangement of the environment: i.e., the chairs are set up in the reading circle
Everyday Examples of Visual Tools • Signs on bathroom doors • Lines in a parking lot • White lines on the side of the road • Maps • Calendars, Daily Planners • Signs, Labels • Checkbooks, telephone books • Shopping lists, notes, menus • Schedules, TV guides, theater guides • Assembly or operating instructions
Natural Environmental Cues • Furniture Arrangement • Location and movement of people and objects • Printed material such as signs, signals, logos, labels, prices • Written messages, instructions, choices, menus • Directions on packages, machines, or in business locations
Why use visual supports? Using visual tools to manage classroom communication: • Increases the effectiveness of teacher communication • Helps students perform more consistently • Makes the communication process more efficient for everyone involved.
Why use visual supports? Organizing the environment with visual supports can: • Create an orderliness to the environment that gives students a sense of stability • Help students experience greater structure and predictability • Help students function more independently • Enable students to become more responsible for their own performance and belongings • Increase student reliability • Make it easier for everyone to find or remember what they need
Why use visual supports? Using visual tools to help give directions: • Helps gain and maintain student attention • Makes the teaching of a task more routine or consistent • Standardizes directions and procedures among various teachers • Helps students learn to perform sequences faster • Increases student reliability and consistency • Gives students a greater sense of independence • Helps students stay on task • Helps students work through behavior problems • Enables students to perform more complicated or lengthy tasks with less supervision
How Visual Supports Help Especially with special needs populations - • They provide structure and routine • They assist with transitions • They provide forewarning • They alleviate anxiety
How Visual Supports Help With all children – • They build on comprehension • They assist with language development • They increase independence • They increase appropriate behaviors
Some Types of Visual Supports for Students • Picture Books • Story Kits • Visual Notes • Visual Organizers • Visual Schedules • Visual Task Charts • Behavior Reminder Charts • Social Stories • Vocabulary Charts/Notebooks
Why use visual supports? Visuals promote language development. • Using visual tools promotes language development by pairing an image in the child’s mind with what he/she hears. • This image is easier for the child to retrieve. • This “picture database” promotes understanding of language and increases verbalization.
Why use visual supports? Visual supports promote independence. • Visual supports can assist children in remembering : • the tasks to perform, • the sequence of steps in a job or routine, • and the behavior that is expected in a situation.
Why use visual supports? Visual (picture) representations of language assist with development of literacy skills. • Visual representations of words in sentences illustrate: • word order, • grammar, • and meaning.
Why use visual supports? Visual images increase vocabulary development. • Vocabulary development increases when students have visual images of word meaning • and when the words are categorized into groups.
Why use visual supports? Visual supports help children remember information longer. • Visual supports do not disappear into thin air like words do. • Children can refer back to the visual representation at any time. • Students can go back over and over again to the visual support to help them understand and remember.
Why use visual supports? Social interaction and verbal directions shift quickly in a classroom. • Using visual supports help children who: • listen slowly, • have difficulty sustaining attention • or difficulty shifting attention • interpret long and/or confusing directions or discourse.
Why use visual supports? Visual supports help control behavior. • Schedules and calendars are the most common visual tools used to give students information. • Step-by-step directions, choice boards, and classroom rules provide structure in classrooms. • They help students by creating an environment that is more predictable and understandable.
Visuals will help children: In the regular classroom: • Organize materials in the classroom • Organize the space in the environment • Communicate rules • Teach routines • Provide structure to the day • Clarify verbal information • Review and remember • Manage time • Access information • Learn vocabulary
Visuals will help children: For Individual Children: • Learn new skills • Support transitions • Stay on task • Handle changes • Guide self management • Aid memory • Speed up slow thinking • Support language retrieval • Communicate emotions • Provide structure
Supporting Language I need help, please. Yes, please. No, thank you. You’re welcome.