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

Sharing our own Stories & Social Problem Solving using Story Grammar Marker®

Joseph Coupal - Thursday, September 01, 2011

Over the summer I had the kind of “Kickoff” that we all hope to avoid in the course of our ho-hum days. It was a 95-degree school day and I was leaving one setting to go to my private practice and run a social skill group. As I opened my passenger side door to put my bag in the car, an oppressive blast of heat enveloped me. I decided stupidly that it would be a good idea to lean over and start the car so the A/C could have, you know, a millisecond to cool down the car as I walked around toward the driver side. Of course when I got there the door had locked automatically, as it had on the other side. Ugh.

As I stewed in the heat waiting for the auto club to help me out, I thought about the group I had to run shortly (with a dwindling amount of time to actually get there), and how using Story Grammar Marker® and sharing this story could possibly help them when I arrived. I find that when we open up to kids a bit and share real-life stories, their engagement level often increases as they realize that we are actually real people who make silly mistakes and have Kickoffs just like they do. Having received a preview of Mindwing’s upcoming new book, Facilitating Relationships, I also realized that my story could use what is called a Social Problem Solving Prompt, a key intervention outlined in the new book (and supported by the National Autism Center in its recommendation for story-based interventions). In this new book there are 18 different Social Problem Solving Prompts for social situations to help your students to recognize, think about and talk about a social situation including, characters, settings, kick-offs, feelings, conflicts, plans, perspectives and consequences.

When I got to our therapy center 10 minutes late, my graduate student had skillfully and promptly started group (see below for how this occurred), and they were sharing their own weekly news over snack. It seemed a good time to share my news, and I had grabbed a Student Story Grammar Marker as I passed a treatment room. “So, I have a story for you...” I started, and relayed the setting and Kickoff. A good teaching point immediately ensued when one of the boys shouted out “HA HA!” I cued him that while my positive body language while relaying the story could give him a clue that it was OK to smile and laugh a bit WITH me, what he had just done was more in the realm of teasing and made me think an annoyed thought! From there, my story really became a Problem Solving Prompt and an interactive discussion as I asked the boys a lot of questions while using the SGM for visual support:

How do you think I felt? Hot, annoyed, worried, angry were some suggestions.

Which Unthinkable can you guess almost got in my brain? Glass Man, who makes us overreact to problems and SHATTER! (See Michelle Garcia Winner and Stephanie Madrigal’s Superflex™ Curriculum)
Can you guess what my plan was? (This one took some scaffolding to elicit that my plan was to get into my car and get to group on time, or get the message to the center that someone needed to start group for me).

We then talked through what my problem solving steps were. Here’s a preview of what that could look like using one of the Prompts from Facilitating Relationships:

In effect, something as simple as my silly keys story could provide a quick teachable moment that touched on a lot of goals for this particular group: narrative organization, social inference, self-regulation, self-talk, problem solving and interpersonal skills, among others.

Additionally, we all got to talk about what my “Note To Self” should be (see Sara Ward’s excellent work on this concept) after this experience: Don’t start the car unless you are seated in the driver’s seat!

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 has presented on the topic of technology integration in speech and language at the ASHA convention 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

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

Archive