1st Edition

AAC and Aided Language in the Classroom Breaking Down Barriers for Learners with Speech, Language and Communication Needs

204 Pages 127 Color & 20 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

204 Pages 127 Color & 20 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

204 Pages 127 Color & 20 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

Have you got learners in your class who have S peech, Language, and Communication Needs (SLCNs) who would benefit from resources to support their communication skills, such as using Aided Language/ Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC)? This empowering book is designed with these questions at its heart. Written in an accessible style, by teachers for teachers, it offers guidance... Read more

Preface

Chapter 1- More Than the Freedom of Speech 

Chapter 2 - Lifting the Veil of Terminology 

Chapter 3- Myths and Misconceptions: What the Research Tells Us

Chapter 4– Education is not an Island– The Importance of Teamwork 

Chapter 5- What we Already Know

Chapter 6- Getting the Environment Right

Chapter 7- What is Symbolic Language?

Chapter 8- How do we Teach Symbolic Language?  

Chapter 9- Modelling

Chapter 10- Language Development – The Danger Zone of Just Requesting

Chapter 11- Low Cost, Effective Resources 

Chapter 12- Communication Partner Skills

Chapter 13- Supporting Access to Aided Language for Learners with Physical Disabilities

Chapter 14- Assessment and Target Setting

Chapter 15- Opportunities – Pupil Voice

Chapter 16- Whole School Approach to Supporting Learners with Speech, Language and Communication Needs (SLCNs)

Chapter 17- Final thoughts

Index

Biography

Katy Leckenby is a Senior AAC Consultant for Ace Centre, a national charity providing support and advice to people with complex needs around the use of Assistive Technology (ATech) and Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC). Katy is passionate about facilitating communication and removing barriers to ensure that all students can fully access education. She holds an MA in Inclusive Education and was a teacher for seventeen years, starting in Primary then moving into Special Education, where she taught young people with ASC, MLD, SLD, PMLD and complex needs.

Meaghan Ebbage-Taylor is a Senior AAC Consultant for Ace Centre and a trained Primary School teacher. She has worked within a special school, teaching pupils with a range of communication difficulties, including those who have made use of a wide range of AAC, both paper-based and electronic. Meaghan’s teaching background has given her a good insight into the everyday implementation of AAC within a classroom context and how to support this to meet the communication need of individuals to get their voice heard.