Harness the power of LEGO (R) bricks to promote essential skills in children and young people with speech, language and communication needs. This practical guide is full of information and tips on identifying areas of language need, how to implement and run interventions successfully, and how to measure progress.
Dawn Ralph gained her Speech Pathology & Therapy degree from Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh in 1985 and has worked as a paediatric speech and language therapist ever since. She has worked in a variety of settings from a paediatric brain injury unit to both specialist and mainstream schools. Jacqui Rochester has been working with SEN children for over sixteen years. In 2014 she gained her Bachelor of Philosophy in Special Education: Autism (Children) from the University of Birmingham's Autism Centre for Education and Research. Both Dawn and Jacqui run Building Language using LEGO® Bricks workshops for schools and training for professionals.
Acknowledgements. Foreword by Gina Gomez De La Cuesta. Preface. 1. What are Autism and Language Impairments?. 2. Building Language using LEGO® Bricks and LEGO® Therapy (LeGoff 2004). 3. Aims. 4. Why Building Language using LEGO® Bricks Works. 5. Starting Off. 6. Progressing Skills: The Role of the Facilitator. 7. Guidelines for Setting Up and Running Building Language using LEGO® Bricks. 8. Measuring Outcomes. 9. Examples of Cases. Resource Appendix.
Show moreHarness the power of LEGO (R) bricks to promote essential skills in children and young people with speech, language and communication needs. This practical guide is full of information and tips on identifying areas of language need, how to implement and run interventions successfully, and how to measure progress.
Dawn Ralph gained her Speech Pathology & Therapy degree from Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh in 1985 and has worked as a paediatric speech and language therapist ever since. She has worked in a variety of settings from a paediatric brain injury unit to both specialist and mainstream schools. Jacqui Rochester has been working with SEN children for over sixteen years. In 2014 she gained her Bachelor of Philosophy in Special Education: Autism (Children) from the University of Birmingham's Autism Centre for Education and Research. Both Dawn and Jacqui run Building Language using LEGO® Bricks workshops for schools and training for professionals.
Acknowledgements. Foreword by Gina Gomez De La Cuesta. Preface. 1. What are Autism and Language Impairments?. 2. Building Language using LEGO® Bricks and LEGO® Therapy (LeGoff 2004). 3. Aims. 4. Why Building Language using LEGO® Bricks Works. 5. Starting Off. 6. Progressing Skills: The Role of the Facilitator. 7. Guidelines for Setting Up and Running Building Language using LEGO® Bricks. 8. Measuring Outcomes. 9. Examples of Cases. Resource Appendix.
Show moreAcknowledgements. Foreword by Gina Gomez De La Cuesta. Preface. 1. What are Autism and Language Impairments?. 2. Building Language using LEGO® Bricks and LEGO® Therapy (LeGoff 2004). 3. Aims. 4. Why Building Language using LEGO® Bricks Works. 5. Starting Off. 6. Progressing Skills: The Role of the Facilitator. 7. Guidelines for Setting Up and Running Building Language using LEGO® Bricks. 8. Measuring Outcomes. 9. Examples of Cases. Resource Appendix.
Practical guide to running language therapy sessions using LEGO® bricks
Dawn Ralph gained her Speech Pathology & Therapy degree from Queen Margaret University, Edinburgh in 1985 and has worked as a paediatric speech and language therapist ever since. She has worked in a variety of settings from a paediatric brain injury unit to both specialist and mainstream schools. Jacqui Rochester has been working with SEN children for over sixteen years. In 2014 she gained her Bachelor of Philosophy in Special Education: Autism (Children) from the University of Birmingham's Autism Centre for Education and Research. Both Dawn and Jacqui run Building Language using LEGO® Bricks workshops for schools and training for professionals.
It was a pleasure and an honor to read Dawn Ralph and Jacqui
Rochester's guidebook for language development using LEGO®
materials. The work is an extension and expansion of the
LEGO®-based therapy approach that has been previously published by
my colleagues and me. That work focused on social development
strategies using LEGO®, which necessarily involved an emphasis on
effective communication. Ralph and Rochester have taken that
emphasis a step further, and have focused in particular on the
language-based aspects of the LEGO® therapy process - the receptive
and expressive components of functional and social communication
that are emphasized by the joint, collaborative LEGO®-building
process. They have also shown how the method can be utilized with
children with cognitive and language-based disabilities who were
not included in the original LEGO®-based therapy trials.
Ralph and Rochester's work is clearly and succinctly written,
well-researched, but not mired down in theory or the minutiae of
research literature. It is, therefore, a very pragmatic,
commonsense, and yet evidence-based methodology, accessible to
anyone in the helping professions who has an interest in improving
functional and social communication in children with language-based
disabilities.
It is a special pleasure for me to read this pragmatic and
well-considered manuscript. When I first started doing LEGO®-based
therapy groups in the later 1990's, there was very little
literature available on effective interventions, and none of my
colleagues were aware of LEGO® as a potential therapy tool. It was
really only Tony Attwood, and Robert and Lynn Koegel who were
supportive of this type of approach - using naturally-reinforcing
content and materials, and utilizing peers to help shape social
development. Later, I was also encouraged by Fred Volkmar's kind
words about my first published study. He said the method showed
promise.
In that first paper, I invited other clinicians and researchers to
consider utilizing the LEGO® materials, and to try variations of
the method I was using, with different populations, etc. Since that
time, there have been other publications based on the original
method, but this is the first real modification and extension of
the LEGO®-based therapy method. So, twelve years later, the
manuscript by Ralph and Rochester, does show evidence that the
original approach can be modified and generalized, and provides a
long-awaited response to my invitation. I will pass along the
encouraging words that I received from the venerable Dr. Volkmar:
this work of Ralph and Rochester certainly shows promise. I hope it
catches on.
*Daniel B. LeGoff, paediatric, neuropsychologist, and originator of
LEGO®-Based Therapy*
Building Language Using LEGO™ Bricks is a fantastic approach, and
the book did not disappoint. The language used throughout is
accessible, yet extremely detailed, making it a book for parents
and professionals alike. I have been lucky enough to attend the
course run by Dawn and Jacqui, and their personalities shone
through as I read the book; it's the perfect companion to the
training Dawn and Jacqui provide, and is a must have for anyone who
is interested in using LEGO™ as a tool to deliver language
therapy.
*Karen Sullivan, founder of Autism Puzzles*
This book is organised, easy to read and gives clear instructions
about how to set up and run a session with children interested in
LEGO™ and construction. The intervention has been adapted and
developed using the technique hands-on with the children, and it
shows. Practical guidance and an engaging activity make the
intervention do-able!
*Gina Davies, Speech and Language Therapist, Autism Specialist*
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