Happy Birthday!

We would like to wish a very happy belated birthday to all of our pupils who celebrated their birthdays last week and a happy birthday to those celebrating their special day next week.

Here is a very special song to each of you from our Music Therapist, Emmeline – trust me you wouldn’t want to hear the rest of us sing!

We hope you all had/have a wonderful day.

26th March

28th March

30th March

2nd April

Activities For Next Week

Thank you so much to all our parents and carers for their patience while we created a range of learning activities for you to access at home.

Below is an suggested timetable for the week.  As you can see, it includes a range of activities which are not only familiar to your child but also cover a broad variety of curricular areas throughout the week.

Please note that this timetable is only a suggestion.  We recognise that this is a confusing time for our pupils with the loss of their normal school routines however, we are not expecting parents to recreate a school day and ‘teach’ their child in the same way we would do in school.  Use this time to make some wonderful memories as a family so feel free to dip in and out of activities as you feel is appropriate for your child.

If you do decide to follow this timetable, please ensure that your child has the opportunity for regular brain breaks and down time such as choosing, in between.

We will be posting a variety of activities regularly on the school website and teachers will be in direct contact with families should you require anything more specific for your child.

Activities

Circle Time: This is an activity that the majority of pupils in the school participate in on a daily basis although the specific routines do vary from class to class.  Some classes have been filming their circle time routines to share with parents and where possible, we shall post these on the website.  Your child’s teacher can also offer you more information on the specific routine in their class and the areas they cover.

Music With Emmeline:  Emmeline, our music therapist, has been very busy creating a range of videos which are posted daily on the website.  She is also offering 1:1 online sessions with pupils and if you would be interested in, please contact her directly for more information.  Her email address is emmeline@elmmusictherapy.com

Story Of The Week:  Each week we will be posting a mini book study.  Classes in the Primary Department have chosen their favourite stories and the study will have a link to where you can listen to the story online and a related activity for each day.

Art/Music/Drama:  Members of our Expressive Arts team, Diane, Keith and Sam, have also been creating videos to share with you with which will be posted on the website weekly.

Barefoot Books:  Many of our students enjoy the Barefoot Books stories.  They can be found on YouTube at https://www.youtube.com/user/barefootbooks.  We shall also post the video for specific books weekly on the website.

For all other areas, we are in the process of creating learning grids.  These will have a variety of activities which you can pick and choose from over the coming weeks.

We will be keeping in regular contact with our families but we would love to see how you are all getting on.  If you would be willing to share any photos or videos of activities you have undertaken at home with our school community, please email:

Amy Dunnett (Principal Teacher Primary) adunnett@aberdeencity.gov.uk

 

Information For Parents And Carers

As we are all aware this is a difficult and uncertain time for our families who are supporting their children at home.

Here are a few documents which you might find useful in helping you support your child throughout this time.

Supporting Children With Learning Disabilities/ASD: Coping With COVID-19 Isolation

This document, produced by Cardiff and Vale University Health Board, contains a range of useful information for parents about structure and routines, managing behaviour and advice on activities and exercise.

Making Sense Of Sensory Behaviour: A Practical Approach At Home For Parents And Carers

This document, produced by Falkirk Council, gives parents advice on supporting their child with sensory issues and regulation.  It also offers specific strategies to support calming, alerting, personal care and eating as well as advice on challenging behaviour.

Sensology

The following page was devised by Flo Longhorn and offers ideas for wakening up the senses.

Music With Emmeline – Friday 27th March

Here are today’s musical activities from Emmeline.

Musical Story: Igor – The Bird Who Couldn’t Sing by Satoshi Kitamura

Every Friday we will be providing you with a different musical story. Today’s musical story is Igor – The Bird Who Couldn’t Sing by Satoshi Kitamura. Emmeline is going to read the story with different pauses for musical moments.

Here are links to each of the musical moment so that you can listen to them yourselves at home at any point;

The Dawn Chorus: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s9dbAfjlrks

The Cat Swing Band: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n-eQvmkcINw

The Dog Rock Band: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PN1gwO_6gv0

The Sheep Orchestra: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fOk8Tm815lE

The Crocodile Samba Band: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-EAwoMMQtEM

The Penguin Choir: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z8FCGlwUyYQ

Igor’s Song! ‘Don’t Worry Be Happy’: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-diB65scQU

What was your favourite music from today’s story?

Donald Far’s Yer Troosers: Part 5 – Verse 4 and The Whole Song!

We have one more verse of Donald Far’s Yer Troosers to learn and then we will put the whole song together! We hope you have enjoyed learning your first virtual Makaton song at home and can now practise it over the weekend! It is certainly one that gets stuck in your head!

To wear the kilt is my delight,
It isn’t wrong, I know it’s right.
The highlanders would get a fright
If they saw me in my troosers.

Now have a go at the whole song!

Room 18: Tasks for Home

At school we have been working on developing skills for life. It would be fantastic if you could find time in your day to keep these skills going:

Life Skills:

  • Spreading butter onto bread/toast
  • Making cups of tea under close supervision
  • Making light lunches
  • Doing the dishes (and drying and putting away)
  • Dressing themselves
  • Tying shoe laces
  • Putting socks on
  • Cleaning kitchen surfaces
  • Cleaning other household surfaces (shower, windows, doors)
  • Loading the washing machine
  • Hanging out laundry

Communication:

 

Maths and Literacy.

  • Your child has access to educationcity.com on this site you will find a range of maths and literacy activities which your child can engage in. Logins will be provided.

General Activities:

https://www.tts-group.co.uk/home+learning+activities.html Exciting Learning Opportunities (Early Years)

https://www.twinkl.co.uk/resource/early-level-home-learning-resource-pack-cfe-pa-2548601 Home learning pack for learners working at Early Levels

https://www.twinkl.co.uk/resource/eyfs-nursery-school-closure-home-learning-resource-pack-t-tp-2549365 Home learning pack for learners working at Early Levels

 

 

 

Room 18 suggested Daily Routine:

If you would like to follow our school day, this is a suggested timetable which mirrors our class routine.

Time Activity Task
0915 Settle into your day Wash hands
0930 Circle time Sing and Sign hello

What day is it?

What month is it?

Makaton sign

Daily news

What is the plan for the day?

1000 Work- maths or language See task list above
1030 Snack and Break Healthy Snack

Outside free play

1100 Life-skills work See task list above
1130 Walk Enjoy the outdoors- there are some activity ideas in the packs
1230 Lunch and Break Pupils tidy up after themselves once they have finished their lunch
1330 Tasks such as cooking, art, music or outdoor learning There are resources for this in the packs
1400 PE  
1430 Choosing Time Outside, Laptop, listening to music, Play a game etc
1500 Finish structured day  

 

 

Room 17 Home Learning Ideas

Hello,

Please find below a list of activities / ideas from Room 17’s teacher that you can complete with your child.  Feel free to dip in and out of these as you wish.

 

If your child uses a communication system then please try to use it daily with them. If you need some advice about this then please send me an email.

 

Life Skills:

  • Help to make or prepare meals

https:www.jamieoliver.com/features/category/get-kids-cooking/

  • Use a knife to practice spreading, toast, crackers…
  • Practice cutting toast, soft fruits/veg (using hand over hand or with very close supervision)
  • Pouring – pouring liquid or dry foods from one container to another
  • Help to wash and dry dishes
  • Putting away dishes
  • Making simple and meaningful choices (usually from a choice of two) using the objects as reference

 

Literacy

 

Health and Wellbeing:

  • Going for a walk in an open area and discussing what you see and hear along the way
  • Cosmic kids yoga – a lot of episodes are on Youtube and there are greater mindfulness videos too if you need to relax

https://www.cosmickids.com/category/watch/

 

Sensory:

 

  • If you have an instruments at home then play along to your child’s favourite music – if you don’t have instruments then why not make a few together, for example take a plastic bottle, fill with dried beans (or something similar) and shake!

 

Music With Emmeline – Thursday 26th March

Here are today’s musical activities from Emmeline.

Song: Five Little monkeys
Five little monkeys is such a popular children’s song. We have prepared our version of it with 5 printed monkeys stuck to desk bells! We will play one each time a monkey falls off the bed. Don’t worry if you do not have instruments like this! Could you bang a pan or clap your hands every time a monkey falls off the bed instead? You could also print and cut out or draw 5 Little monkeys to practise counting down.

Donald Far’s Yer Troosers: Part 4 – Verse 3

Today we are learning the third verse of Donald Fars Yer Troosers! We hope you can still remember the other verses and the chorus as tomorrow we will be putting the whole song together!

Now, I went down to London town
And I had some fun on the underground.
The ladies turned their heads around, saying;
“Donald, where are your trousers?

Storytime: Elevenses with David Walliams

You’re never too old to enjoy a story! Many of our senior classes enjoy listening to stories and in these uncertain times all of us (adults too) can benefit from a bit of escapism! Please tune in daily to listen to author David Walliams sharing stories. While stories are shared at 11 am, they can be accessed throughout the day.  The link to his website is:

Home

Room 15 General Learning Activities

Many of our learning activities have focused on life skills, and should be easy to include in daily routines without many / any resources.  Below are a range of ideas and a sample of what a day might look like – please take from this anything that you find useful.

 

Communication

  • Encourage your child to use their communication system throughout the day. (Cannot stress this one enough – insisting on communication device usage all day has seen incredible progress, we’d love to see this continue for when school re-opens!)
  • Read a story together – there are signed stories on YouTube if you’re looking for something new! One example of many – https://bit.ly/3aj0z0L
  • Share a signed song or two together – I’ve linked some class favourites: https://bit.ly/39468Pa
  • Practice the Makaton “sign of the week” – https://wetalkmakaton.org/
  • Bucket time – we know this has been popular with many of our young people so have put together a few videos showing bucket time if you’d like to try something similar at home. A more detailed explanation with video links is on a separate sheet. These are for your benefit, your child will respond more to your presence than a video.
  • Role play – perhaps different jobs, perhaps different stories, perhaps something different but of particular interest to your child – we like our theme park role play in Class 15!
  • Watch TV together, using your child’s communication system to talk together about what you see, what you like, what you don’t like, etc.

 

Food and drink

  • Help to make breakfast / lunch / dinner
  • Help to chop snack foods (safety, hygiene, not eating food before serving!)
  • Using communication system to request snack foods.
  • Explore how ingredients change when cooking (this is part of the ASDAN science module – if you’re super keen you could take a photo or write a wee note about what your child did and we can put it in their evidence folder!)

 

Life skills

  • Washing hands – several in our class have been working on improving their hand washing skills prior to this, but this is an especially important time to build this skill. Encourage your child to rub soap into their hands.
  • Getting dressed independently – this also includes opportunities for labelling body parts (and which ones are private and should be covered).
  • Brushing teeth and washing faces.
  • Going for a walk – stopping at the road, looking or listening for traffic, communicating when to “go!”
  • Cleaning surfaces, washing the dishes, taking out the recycling.
  • Matching coins, naming coins, helping to buy items at the pretend supermarket.

 

Creative arts

  • Recreate trash band by making instruments from containers you have, pop on some favourite tunes and encourage your child to join in replicating rhythms. Communication work could include requesting a particular tune or commenting on the music they can hear.
  • Draw, colour in, paint, collage – any materials can be used!
  • Dance together – you can explore rhythm, communication, gross motor skills.

 

Outdoor ed

  • Enjoy the great outdoors, talk about what you can see, hear, feel, touch.
  • Talk about the weather, and if the weather means you can’t go outside perhaps you could recreate it indoors – water spray rain, torch (or mobile phone light) for sun, fan for wind.

 

Sensory regulation

Including sensory regulation activities will support our young people with their resilience at a challenging time.

  • Explore preferred sensory resources – perhaps large, soft blankets, possibly shiny card, maybe a cold drink, or perhaps a material to stretch or rip.
  • Messy play – brilliant for communication as well as sensory regulation! Squeeze mud in your hands, squirt shaving foam onto a table and draw shapes, or splash water in the sink.
  • Listen to calming music in an otherwise quiet space, dim lighting and offer your child a hand massage.

 

 

 

Room 15: Home Learning Ideas (Bucket Time)

In order to give some continuity of learning, here are some ideas from Room 15.

 

Bucket time

 

Bucket time is an intervention devised by Gina Davies, a Speech and Language Therapist based in England.  She has shared some fabulous short videos recently explaining bucket time for families, including ideas for how to adapt to what resources you are likely to have at home for home-learning.

 

https://bit.ly/3bj5xdW – introduction to bucket time

https://bit.ly/3bqYsIG – Gina Davies Autism Centre YouTube page (lots of tips for home learning).

 

We know bucket time has been popular with many of our young people so I have put together a few videos showing bucket time if you’d like to try something similar at home.  These are for your benefit, your child will respond more to your presence than a video.

 

https://bit.ly/2U2t3WR

https://bit.ly/395JZ34

https://bit.ly/33w1hFt

 

Stage one – the bucket.

Your aim is to encourage focused attention from your child by creating an irresistible invitation to learn.  Choose high interest items that your child does not get to play with / use normally.  Keep spoken language minimal but be enthusiastic in your presentation.  As your child is learning to focus attention on you (not the item from the bucket), they do not get to use the items from the bucket.

 

If you’re interested in the other stages, I recommend this document for a quick overview: https://bit.ly/2IWV3oB

 

Have fun!