Skip to main content

Home/ Social Studies, Human Resources and Adptations/ Group items tagged handouts

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Kathryn Bolin

Corn handout - 0 views

  •  
    Helpful handout if you want students to "look" for corn. Thanks Katie!
jessiwattenhofer

Mylemarks | Therapy resources for kids and teens - HOME - 0 views

  •  
    EBD strategies: first day
Siri Anderson

Voting Rights Timeline - 0 views

  •  
    Thanks to Jackie for sharing this! So much in here
madisonryb

Using Supporting Evidence to Interpret Meaning - A Native American Folktale | PBS Learn... - 2 views

    • madisonryb
       
      Standard 3G: Students will be encouraged to share their ideas in a discussion about what the storyteller meant by "coyote spirit." Students are asked for evidence from the story that supports their ideas. This will allow them to perform a few of the skills in 3G, student thinking, discussion encouragement, listening, and responding to the questions asked.
  • 1. Ask students what they know about coyotes. List the various responses. 2. Next, tell students the words they used to describe coyotes could also be used to describe people.
    • madisonryb
       
      4E Standard: Students are asked to use prior learning to list what they know about coyotes. This will allow them to make connections to their own personal experiences and prior learning of the subject on coyotes. This may relate to culture and community too as it relates to Native American folktale and the interpretation of the term coyote. The students different descriptions of the word "coyote" are then altered to make connections to how it could resemble people.
  • Ask students to listen for each of these phrases, then ask if there is more than one meaning and discuss. Ask students to continue to provide evidence that supports the meanings they have given. After viewing the video again ask students to write the meanings on the Shulayen Meaning of Words handout.
    • madisonryb
       
      7I Standard: The students are asked to listen to each of the phrases from the video. They are asked to support their evidence of the meanings that they are given. This allows the students to fully expand their learning and express what they have learned using the expression of listening and speaking.
Katelyn Karsnia

Deaf or Hard of Hearing | DO-IT - 1 views

    • Katelyn Karsnia
       
      Helen Keller
  • ommunicate through a sign language interpreter.
  • American Sign Language (ASL) is widely used and has its own grammar and word order.
  • ...7 more annotations...
  • Handouts that can be read before or after class or other presentation are useful.
  • Examples of accommodations
  • interpreters sound amplification systems note takers real-time captioning email for faculty-student meetings and class discussions visual warning systems for lab emergencies changing computer auditory signals to flash changes captioned video presentations
  • When speaking, make sure the student can see your face and avoid unnecessary pacing and moving. When speaking, avoid obscuring your lips or face with hands, books, or other materials. Repeat discussion questions and statements made by other students. Write discussion questions/answers on a whiteboard or overhead projector. Speak clearly and at a normal rate. Use visual aids with few words and large images and fonts. Provide written outlines, assignments, instructions, and demonstration summaries and distribute them before the class or other presentation when possible.
  • direct your speaking style and adjust the "pace" of instruction to make information more accessible to a student with a hearing impairment.
  • Some students who are hard of hearing may hear only specific frequencies or sounds within a certain volume range.
  • They may have difficulty following lectures in large halls, particularly if the acoustics cause echoes or if the speaker talks quietly, rapidly, or unclearly. People who have hearing impairments may find it difficult to simultaneously watch demonstrations and follow verbal descriptions, particularly if they are watching a sign language interpreter, a captioning screen, or a speaker's lips. Small group discussions may also be difficult to follow or participate in, particularly if the discussion is fast-paced and unmoderated, since there is often lag time between a speaker's comments and interpretation.
1 - 5 of 5
Showing 20 items per page