Social Thinking is a treatment framework and curriculum developed by Michelle Garcia Winner that targets how to enhance and improve social thinking abilities, regardless of diagnostic label …
This post contains Amazon Affiliate links for your convenience. Recently I brought you my review of You Are A Social Detective: Explaining Social ThinkingⓇ to Kids by Michelle Garcia Winner and Pamela Crooke… and now I am FINALLY getting around to sharing all of the cool activities we did to go with that book! Woot! If […]
I am going to start teaching a Kindergartner some social thinking vocabulary. She is a very visual learner. I adapted some of Michelle Garcia Winner's information and picture to make up the following lesson to this student understand how she can listen with her whole body. Click on picture for printable lesson
Trying to teach flexible thinking? Check out these engaging flexible thinking exercises that are sure to get your students on the right track.
Kira is working hard on her spelling test, pressing down hard with her pencil as she's writing. Suddenly, the pencil breaks and she bursts into tears. "My pencil broke!!!" she yells to no one in particular.
Superflex teaches kids they can be a superhero if they use flexible thinking strategies to self-regulate. When sneaky characters called Unthinkables visit our brains and push us toward socially unexpected behavior, children use their strategies to defeat the Unthinkables and steer themselves back on the pro-social track. Learn about this positive, motivating program to teach self-regulation!
Social skills can be taught just like academic skills. Follow this six step process to teach your students how to work more effectively in cooperative learning teams.
5 key reasons to teach students to analyze differing perspectives
Kids and young adults need to be able to problem-solve on their own. Every day, kids are faced with a huge number of social situations and challenges. Whether they are just having a conversation with a peer, working with a group on a project, or dealing with an ethical dilemma, kids must use their s
This Social Skills pack is designed for teachers to explicitly teach students the social skills to communicate and interact with each other with care and confidence. Students are asked to consider ways of managing every day scenarios and develop skills that will enable them to nurture their friendships and develop assertiveness. You can build a lesson that includes discussion around the particular skill and follow up with the writing activity. This pack includes nine files as described below. The first five on the list are the same 'Building Social Skills' information (lesson) pages and writing activities in different formats. If you have access to an electronic whiteboard, I would suggest using the ‘Building Social Skills PowerPoint with Activities’. Have a group lesson to discuss each social skill and then ask students to complete the writing activity in their exercise books. The alternative is to print out the black and white booklets and have students learn about each skill and complete the activities in their own booklet or single worksheets. All pages can be printed on Letter / A4 or Ledger / A3 paper. 1. Building Social Skill Portrait Color Pages (23 pages) 2. Building Social Skills PowerPoint with Activities (45 pages) 3. Building Social Skills PowerPoint without Activities (23 pages) 4. Building Social Skill Portrait Black and White (23 pages) 5. Building Social Skills Booklet/Worksheets (23 pages) 6. Hello Posters (3 pages) 7. Fixed Mindset Vs Growth Mindset Posters Girl and Boy (2 pages) 8. Growth Mindset Posters (12 pages) 9. Restorative Justice Posters (2 pages) Skills covered: Being a Good Friend Having a Meaningful Conversation Positive Thinking Respecting Other People’s Opinions Giving and Receiving Compliments Acting Confidently Speaking in Front of an Audience Resisting Peer Pressure Standing Up For Your Beliefs Making Friends and Joining In Including Others Ignoring Someone Who Is Bullying You Asking Someone to Stop Annoying You Standing Up For Yourself Apologizing Suggesting and Negotiating Solving Problems and Disagreements Being a Good Winner or a Good Loser Being Yourself Asking an Adult for Support What is Bullying? How We Treat Others All of the components in this pack are for classroom use only and not for resale or distribution in any way. Copyright CC BY-NC-ND Not for Commercial Use Thank you for looking!
A blog post written by a speech language pathologist with intervention ideas during speech therapy for working on the social filter of students with autism, ADHD or mental health challenges.
Social Emotional Workshop offers practical tools for social emotional learning and counseling.
The information here is valuable and anyone who is looking for insight and tools to help individuals with special needs including autism and A.D.D.
Social Skills: Teaching Students to think for themselves (not just Autism/ ADHD) 31 pages- both templates and examples
Students with social learning challenges or related disabilities have difficulty seeing the “gestalt” or the “big picture” and any behavioral system created for them needs to provide extra information about the concepts we are trying to teach. It cannot be assumed that a student understands how his behavior is linked to the consequences that follow, or that he understands how his behavior affects the perspective of fellow students or educators. Social Behavior Mapping is a system that helps to connect different aspects of behavior while also teaching social responsibility.
(PDF) 66 SOCIAL SKILLS for KIDS Checklist + a FREE Printable Poster download. Success in social interactions & relationship building.
A 2nd grade winter early finishers social emotional worksheet that makes students think about things they can and cannot control.
michelle garcia winner, social thinking, social skills
Little BOOK format - Have you ever had a child who refuses to cooperate? This social story addresses the problem with the support from matching posters and Break Cards. Social stories are not just for Autistic children. They are a visual support for any child who lacks a social skill. Social stories are an entertaining format that children can relate to. These stories state the problem, why it's a problem, and what to do about it. They are a basis for discussion and can be referred to over and over. Print and fold these books as many times as you like (Folding instructions included). PRINT ON LEGAL SIZE PAPER ONLY. Send a copy home so parents can read them with their child and reinforce your efforts in school. If a copy is damaged, print another. Collect an assortment of these little social story books and allow your students to read the books whenever they like. Included in this product are the following: Social story - I Don't Want To This is an 8 page "Little Book" (3 1/2 x 4 1/4 inches) with color pictures to support the text. This book features the child who is doesn't want to do what an adult tells him to do . It talks about why it is important to follow directions. It suggests taking time away. Posters Three posters (print on 8 1/2 x 11 paper). These are in color and match the illustrations in the book. Break Cards Two sizes of break cards (in both black & white and color) are included to support the story. Check out the PREVIEW before purchasing to be sure this Little Book meets your needs. Denise
Use Dan Siegel’s hand model to teach your kiddos about the emotional brain.
Me: "Oh, let's look back over our work. I think we need to try to spell 'clover' again. Let's try it together."Kid:"UUUHHHHGGG. I already sounded it out and I spelled it right. C-L-O-V-R. See.. Clover,
Learn more about seven easy steps to teaching social skills to students with disabilities. Good social skills are essential, learn more...
A social story is a simple description of how to behave and what to expect in a particular situation. Grab your 13 free editable social stories here to...
This is a list of 15 online stories to explore social skills and character development. There are also several songs to sing (Howard Wigglebottom)
Social Stories about Friendship Ah, friendship. I had a mom once say to me, 'I want my child to have a friend, not a buddy.'
It took me all of a few days of parenting twins to recognize that their brains were truly unique to them . It was fascinating (and a bit overwhelming) to see how differently they responded to the same exact circumstances. The debate over nature and nurture won’t be going away anytime soon. It i
Have you ever thought about using wordless videos in your speech therapy lessons? It increases engagement! Start with these videos...
This social skill pack is designed to reinforce concepts of personal space with kids in a fun way, using bright colorful aliens to illustrate the differences between being a space invader (aka showing bad personal space) and being a friend who shows good personal space. Here's what's included in this social skills pack: Personal space "bubbles" poster that explains that people have an invisible bubble of personal space Personal space invader checklist poster to help kids learn how to pick up on the clues that they might be invading someone's personal space Personal space poster with the one arm length rule that is ideal for getting just the right amount of personal space Personal space cue cards that kids can keep handy on a binder ring so that they can reference and/or practice what good personal space looks like Personal space invader meter to help kids visually see and identify when they are standing too close, too far, or just right Personal space invader sorting activity to help kids practice identifying the nonverbal cues from the checklist **This is a digital product that you can download immediately after purchase.**
This post contains Amazon Affiliate links for your convenience. Recently I brought you my review of You Are A Social Detective: Explaining Social ThinkingⓇ to Kids by Michelle Garcia Winner and Pamela Crooke… and now I am FINALLY getting around to sharing all of the cool activities we did to go with that book! Woot! If […]