Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Auditory What Are Some Good Activities For A Child With An Auditory Processing Disorder?

What are some good activities for a child with an auditory processing disorder? - auditory

My nephew is seven years and was diagnosed with auditory processing and perception disorders. He sees a speech therapist twice a week in primary school. What are some things I can do to help? All ideas on how to integrate these activities into everyday tasks?

2 comments:

  1. Visuals, graphics, images ... the most important for him. The use of images to communicate to the calendar, tasks, etc. would be very important in daily communication activities. A large number of hands to handle, when in fact, looked at learning tasks would be great too. For example, if it helps with the math, you are really manipulative, such as bears, working on problems of addition and subtraction to help. When working on spelling words, images or provide foam alphabet to spell out letters, words.

    One would think that not having heard what you do, always a good idea, and the brain are sometimes confused. What you see is logical ... think this way and you should have no problem.

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  2. Buy a toy called Bop-it. There are several versions available in stores like Target for $ under 25. He gave oral orders issued and the child must respond within a specified period of time, completing a friendly resource in the toy industry. It trains the brain. Another good toy is Simon. Do you want games and activities that require a response, auditory, and verbal or physical fast.

    Visuals are excellent accommodation for your child to help avoid the problem. Not develop visual deficits.

    It's great that a language (SLP), twice per week. Is it one-on-one?

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