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2. Benefits of cooking activities. Cooking is a motivating activity for many people. Cooking provides experiences with:AromasColorsTexturesShapes TemperaturesWeights. . 3. Benefits of cooking activities. Cooking is A pleasant way to spend time with others or aloneA channel for activity: stirring, pouring, cleaning up.
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1. Rattle Those Pots and Pans:Classroom Cooking Activities Incorporating Technology and Literacy Holly Cooper, Ph.D. Pat Van Geem
hollycooper@tsbvi.edu patvangeem@tsbvi.edu
Outreach Assistive Technology Consultants
Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired
2. 2 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is a motivating activity for many people. Cooking provides experiences with:
Aromas
Colors
Textures
Shapes
Temperatures
Weights
3. 3 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is
A pleasant way to spend time with others or alone
A channel for activity: stirring, pouring, cleaning up
4. 4 Benefits of cooking activities Students who do not like to eat may enjoy food preparation and tasting
Students who are tube fed can experience food in a fun, non-threatening way
5. 5 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is age appropriate for a variety of students
Very young children can pour, stir, spread, taste, touch and smell
6. 6 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is beneficial for elementary school students
They can cook simple meals or special treats for an instructional activity
7. 7 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is beneficial for secondary aged students who can
Participate in home economics in an inclusion setting
Participate in vocational or life skills training
8. 8 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is a good activity in which to use technology
Almost any student can participate with support
9. 9 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is a good activity in which to use media modifications for:
Print readers
Braille readers
Tactile symbol users
Picture symbol users
10. 10 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is a good way to teach communication skills in a functional context:
Requesting
Responding
Turn taking
Responding to novel situations or surprises
11. 11 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is a good way to include peers as a helper or as a participant
12. 12 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is a good way to teach academic skills in a functional context:
Reading
Math
Science
Geography
13. 13 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is a crucial part of the Expanded Core Curriculum
See the RECC at http://www.tsbvi.edu/recc/index.htm
14. 14 Benefits of cooking activities Cooking is a multi-sensory activity that can address a variety of learning domains
(See infused skills checklist)
15. 15 Getting Ready Find a good location in the room or school
In a kitchen or kitchen area
Near a water source
Near a power source
In a location where snacks or meals are served
16. 16 Getting Ready Suggested tools if you don’t have a kitchen: (any or all)
Small fridge
Microwave
Blender
Toaster oven
Hot plate
Hot pot or rice cooker
17. 17 Planning the Activity What tools and appliances will be used?
Make sure you have everything assembled
Or plan for where the students must go to get them in natural but accessible locations
18. 18 Planning the Activity Plan with the students:
Choose the food or recipe together
Talk about the ingredients, review vocabulary and “sight” words
Talk about what tools ingredients will be used, and where you find them
19. 19 Planning the Activity What modifications are needed? Prepare:
Photographs
Braille
Print
Tactile symbols
Communication overlays
Recipes
20. 20 Planning the Activity Shopping: Can this become part of the activity?
Make grocery lists
Plan for transportation
Count money
Look for advertisements (prices)
21. 21 Planning the Activity Money
Donations of money or ingredients from parents
Sell your product to raise money: popcorn, cookies, dog biscuits
22. 22 Doing It Wash hands and food surfaces
Beware of the good fairy syndrome
Minimize prompting
Maximize communication opportunities
Clean up is part of the activity
23. 23 Reviewing It Talk about the activity afterwards
Conversations help review the spoken or signed vocabulary
Write an Experience Story, it helps review print, braille or tactile symbols
24. 24 Reviewing It Experience story:
Collect “artifacts” during the activity: photos, packages, etc
Talk about the steps involved in fixing the food
Talk about who did which steps
Talk about who liked the taste
Write it in accessible format
Share it with peers, parents
25. 25 Alternative Food Experiences For students who are tube fed, have trouble eating or find food aversive:
Encourage these students to touch, smell and taste (if allowed)
Guide students gently to put their hands in doughs or batters
26. 26 Alternative Food Experiences For students who are tube fed, have trouble eating or find food aversive:
Make smoothies using yogurt, ice cream or fruit juice as a base
Experiment with frozen treats
Make healthy sweet snacks such as apple sauce
Avoid temperature extremes (except some students love ice cream and frozen treats)
27. 27
Repetition is not only O.K. it’s good educational programming
Cook often and have fun!
28. The end