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Interactive storytelling, where the story is spoken or chanted,
began as a way to include individuals with severe and profound
learning disabilities in larger group activities, whether children
at school or adults in day services. The stories are performed in
call-and-response - one person calls out a line and the rest of the
group respond either by calling back the same line or by calling
out a pre-arranged response - and require no previous experience in
drama or storytelling. They can be performed anywhere, by anyone.
Various stories are explored, ranging from folktales and pantomime
to poetry, the works of Charles Dickens, Shakespeare and stories
from the Old Testament. Each extract details the full
call-and-response for performing the story. This approach to
storytelling can be used by teachers and group facilitators in a
variety of settings and with any group of children or adults,
irrespective of their level of disability. This hands-on manual
will enable teachers, therapists, parents and anyone working with
children or adults in community settings to use performance and
recital to bring stories, drama and poetry to life for people of
all abilities. 'This book is a useful resource...is simply
written...is especially appropriate for people working with
children and adults with speech, language and communication
difficulties.' - Child Language Teaching and Therapy.
Cos they didn't Adam and Eve it When God said 'Oi! Apple - leave
it! This innovative collection of Bible stories, written in cockney
rhyming slang, is a fresh and fun approach to learning about the
Bible. From Adam and Eve to the Resurrection, the book presents
well-known stories in an original and accessible way for everybody
to enjoy. The stories are ideal for performance or equally for
personal use. They can be used as a form of interactive group
storytelling, using a call-and-response method in which a line is
read out and is repeated by everyone in the group. They are also
very effective as a way of accessing literacy with people who may
not read or write, and individuals with learning disabilities. The
stories are easy to read and include translations of slang words.
Through rhythm and rhyme, Bible Stories in Cockney Rhyming Slang
enables everyone to access and understand stories from the Bible
regardless of their level of literacy.
A practical literature resource for teachers and therapists working
with children and adults with learning disabilities, this new book
uses the context of Shakespeare's Macbeth to develop the skills of
social cognition. The resource includes practical activities based
on the play, a framework for linking skills of social cognition to
the drama activities, and case studies of the work in practice with
different groups. Through their understanding of the atmosphere,
the story line and the language of the play, people with learning
disabilities will be able to experience the pleasure and
intellectual stimulation of engaging fully with a literary text.
The authors explore the drama within the play and its key themes,
such as the tension between trust and betrayal, the origins and
consequences of desire, the nature of appearance and in particular
the problem of knowing what is in another person's mind. They show
how these questions are central to the process of forming a social
identity, and to the understanding of a `theory of mind'.
Participants are helped to develop the key skills of imitation,
joint attention and the understanding of mental states. An
essential resource for professionals, this book will enable them to
develop social skills with people with learning disabilities in
creative and effective ways, and to contribute to the move to bring
literature to a wider audience.
The first book to make literature accessible to people with
learning disabilities, Odyssey Now is a dramatisation of the story
of Odysseus through a variety of interactive games for developing
communication skills and as a means of implementing a multi-sensory
approach. It is designed particularly to include people who have
profound, severe or multiple learning disabilites, but it can be
used or adapted for any group of adults and children who have
communication problems. Suitable for use in schools, colleges,
social education centres or the home, it can also be used in mixed
ability groups and to promote integration between groups with
special needs and non-disabled people. Each interactive game
includes: suggestions for suitable music, pictures, colours and
other resources to accompany the game a storyline guidelines for
staff members a summary of the purpose of the game suggestions for
adapting the game for people with visual impairments. Included with
the games are advice on organising such a programme, suggestions
for record-keeping and tips for adapting the games.
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