Join Our Forum Today! - Click Here

Call 866.851.2415

info@mindwingconcepts.com

HomeOur MethodologyFocus AreasProducts & ServicesRequest ProposalResearchResourcesStoreBlogContact
About Us
Our People
Features
Benefits
Alliances & Associations
Response to Intervention (RtI)
Differentiated Instruction
Language and Literacy
IEP Goals and Benchmarks & Special Education
English Language Learners
Autism Spectrum Disorders
Communication Skills for Traumatized, Abused or Neglected Children
Early Childhood Education
Workshop Calendar
Professional Development Workshops
Instructional Materials
Customized Sessions
Success Stories
Research Evidence & Feedback
Explicit, Systematic Instruction
Free DVD
Free Lessons
What's New
Funding Sources
FAQs
Videos
Presentations
Games
All Products
Braidy the StoryBraid™
Talk to Write, Write to Learn™
Story Grammar Marker®
ThemeMaker™
Data Collection and Progress Monitoring
Activity-Based Enhancements
Books
Posters
Narrative
Expository Text
Grade Levels
Autism
Workshops

Get e-mail notifications of new blog posts! Enter email address below.


Delivered by FeedBurner

 

MindWing Concepts Blog

RSSGrab MWC Feed

Using QR Codes for Spooky Narrative Development

Joseph Coupal - Monday, October 24, 2011

Over on my blog SpeechTechie this month, I am discussing in a series of posts the incredibly useful technique of using QR codes in language interventions. QR codes, which look like this....

...were born in the world of marketing (you may have seen them on ads about town) but are making their way into educational settings as an attention-grabbing tool. QR codes can be created very easily and printed, then scanned with free apps available for your smartphone or iPad. When scanned, the app will show text that you entered or a link to a website, depending on how you created the code. The result is an engaging process of discovery in which the student, instead of being presented a simple block of text, or shown a picture or website, participates in a little “peekaboo” moment in which the stimulus item is presented after scanning the code. Very cool.

QR codes lend themselves to be used in scavenger hunts in which a child locates the codes you have hidden around the classroom, therapy center, or wherever. They also lend themselves to story mapping, as a story can be broken down into text elements and printed as QR codes, one for character/setting, one for kickoff, and so on.

Given the season, I thought it would be fun to provide you with a Halloween lesson you can use right away that incorporates QR codes. You will first want to install a free app (click here for links to apps and a demo) on your smartphone or iPad that you can use to scan codes and display results. Presented below is a favorite ghost story of mine, “The Bus Stop,” modified from Alvin Schwartz’s Scary Stories 3: More Tales to Chill Your Bones (a great resource for more short scares). Click on each of the links below and you will navigate to a webpage with a QR code image. Print it from your web browser (File>Print) and be sure to make a notation on the back of the print-out so you don’t lose track of what is what. Save them in an envelope for use next year too! When scanned, each of the codes will display the text linked below. This would be a great lesson to accompany the Story Grammar Marker complete episode map, and perhaps inspire students to create their own ghost stories using SGM to help them organize their narratives. Here goes!

One night, a man named Ed was driving home from work in a rainstorm.
When he passed by the bus stop, there was a woman waiting for the bus. She was soaking wet and had no umbrella so Ed offered her a ride home. She told him her name was Joanna and they talked while he drove her home.
Ed thought Joanna was very nice and he enjoyed talking with her.
He wanted to get to know her better so he asked if she’d like to have dinner sometime, and she said yes.
Ed and Joanna went out to dinner and had a great time.
They went out many times over the next several weeks, having fun at the movies and walks in the park. Each time he picked her up at the bus stop and dropped her at her house at the end of the night.
One night, Joanna was not at the bus stop when Ed went to pick her up.
Ed went to her house and rang the bell. A woman answered, and Ed told her he was looking for Joanna.
The woman said she was Joanna’s mother, and invited him inside. On the hallway table, Ed saw a picture of Joanna, and asked when it was taken.
Joanna’s mom said, “Right before she died, 18 years ago. She was hit by a car and killed while waiting for a bus at the bus stop.”
Oooooh, so all that time he had been dating a ghost! Probably, that’s not so bad, given what I hear about dating these days. This story is always great for seeing that light of realization on kids’ faces at the conclusion (or helping them to make the connection)!

If you’d like to think about how to break down other stories and make your own QR codes, check out my post and video demo on SpeechTechie. It is MUCH easier than you think!

Sean J. Sweeney, MS, MEd, CCC-SLP is a speech-language pathologist and instructional technology specialist working in the public school and in private practice at The Ely Center in Newton, Massachusetts. He presents and consults on the topic of technology integration in speech and language and is the author of the blog SpeechTechie: Looking at Technology Through a Language Lens and one of the editors of TherapyApp411.


Recent Posts


Tags

think social publishing gingerbread ThemeMaker story grammar marker unexpected behaviors festival of lights mitzi curtis MindWing Concepts and Instructional Technology, Kerproof interactive poetry generator Boise Peace Quilt Project autism spectrum SLPs storybraid the incredible 5-point scale earthquakes lesson ideas new england workshops maryellen Story Patch app umass amherst autism, autism collection, mindwing concepts NARRATIVE PRACTICE HYPOTHESIS PBL speech language therapist details familiar SGM icons SGM story patch ipad app talk to write, write to learn American International College ipad app MakeBeliefsComix screencast interactive resources gingerhouse bread template tornadoes autism awareness month oral language development karen ogen tactile tools Simon's Cat Channel Mindwing's narrative maps You are a Social Detective illustrations ipod app critical thinking Simple Machines offer Language Learning Opportunities, MindWing Concepts Talk to Write, Write to Learn Teacher Manual Tomorrowland autism related disorders mindwing feeling poster narrative structure a day in the park student activity booklet sad SpeechTechie maryellen rooney moreau speech language pathologist webinar five card flickr mindwing autism collection teacher account think social Critter Country Speech Language Pathologists Story-based Intervention for Children with Autism Spectrum Disorders animated stories Social Detectives weather language intervention beyond story grammar teachers Use Google Search Stories tool to develop narrative and expository language, mindwing concepts written expression developmental level narrative Blabberize oral language umass therapy resource make belief comix hurricane irene dunn baron Character, Social Thinking, and the Avatar Incredible 5-Point Scale Story Grammar Marker Teacher Manual make it better story telling we can make it better natick, ma disgusted ASHA leader GlogsterEDU pinky dinky doo summer get-away defeating GlassMan recipient kick-offs speech-language pathologist summer workshops QR Codes surprised scared Sprint's The Gingerbread Man with Everything site Using Kerpoof for Digital Storytelling and Narrative Development narratives digital storytelling app braidy the story braid The Importance of Narrative Development in School and in Life Fantasy Land social problem solving prompts participation scale Disney's Parks mad Lifetime Achievement Award Braidy the StoryBraid comprehension mindwing universal magnet set writing hurricanes skill-building Impossible Present free lessons, mindwing concepts, st patricks day story grammar Disney kinesthetic tools therapyapp411 stories and social problem solving Create A Story social thinking Special Educators summer new england vacation zimmer twins elementary school level emotions color wheel six universal feelings langugage interventions happy Mindwing's Settings Map Disneyland Explorer iPad App narrative and expository text importance of comprehending google sketchup universal magnet set better hearing and speech month iOS narrative development hartford, ct april thanksgiving valentine's day Project-Based Learning thinking about skills new england vacation Common Craft MindWing Concepts development and literacy Character Social Thinking, MindWing Concepts it's all about the story Webquest sesame workshop april is autism awaremess month Mindwing Universal Magnets spooky narrative development ToonTube mindwing the incredible 5-point scale by kari dunn baron and mitzi curtis language development professional development kerpoof FREE webinar toontastic develop storytelling skills story-based interventions recipes Frontierland Setting Description Map national autism center mindwing concepts inc Adult Child Interaction Tantalizing Adjectives Webquests story patch Adventureland speech and language pathologist autism Smart Apps for Kids kick-off popular mechanic real life situations

Archive