Now that some of the
background has been provided to show the shift I took from those common special
education behavioral approaches to a perspective that removed all demands on her
to prove herself repeatedly, I want to share the next step I took. I really think you are all going to like this
because it is something that is extremely easy to do, a remnant
book. Rylee and I began constructing
her very first remnant book in May 2013.
A remnant book is
essentially like a scrapbook of activities the student has participated
in. You can include anything you like in
the book. You can display it in any way
you like. I am not a crafty person
whatsoever; therefore, I just used a three-ring binder with page
protectors. I bought colorful cardstock
to glue the ‘remnants’ to. Items to
include in the remnant book can range from receipts, movie ticket stubs,
pictures, or napkins from a birthday party etc (anything really). I also included a short sentence that
described the event. I quickly learned
that once we completed a remnant book page I needed to seal it with packing
tape. A mistake I made is not including
the date of the activity on the page. I
wish I would have done that!
There are a couple of
purposes the remnant book serves. One is
for conversation starters, which can be very helpful to school staff and
extended family to engage in conversation about meaningful topics to the
student. An example, the student comes
to school from the weekend and the school staff can look at the new remnant
book page and see that ‘Sally’ went to the movies with her family. This can pose as a conversation starter to
talk about the movie and provide vital opportunities to model Sally’s AAC
device! The same goes for the school
staff and Sally to add remnant pages about school so Sally’s parents and she can
talk about what happened at school that day.
The second purpose the remnant book serves is for daily writing topics. I’ll get more into that in another blog post.
It did not take long
for Rylee to catch on to what the remnant book was all about. We spent that summer creating her first
book. Rylee simply adores her remnant
books because they are her own experiences and the book is something she helped
to create! When I would see her drag it
to the living room, I would sit beside her and model her PODD to talk about the
remnant page she was looking at. It wasn’t
until September 2013 that she began using the remnant book for writing topics,
but by then she had plenty of topics to choose from for her writing.
Love it! I will be creating one for Vrinda soon. Thanks for sharing and love the idea of using the remnant page and model with the PODD! Now I can't wait for the next post! Please don't take too long! :-)
ReplyDeleteI'll do my best Ana! Vrinda will love one and you are only limited by your imagination and creativity. Just make it fun!
ReplyDeleteI have been seeing your fb posts about these and Brendan would love them! We will work on a page or two tomorrow since there is no school because it is so cold. Kind of a dumb question, but did you come up with the caption on each page? Was these before she started typing? I'm just trying to see how this starts. Brendan loves my scrap books from when I had time and he would love these and even more that he is the center of them! You are awesome Keisha! Thanks so much for sharing!
ReplyDeleteI didn't proof read before I posted - sorry for the bad grammar.
ReplyDeleteThis was started before her writing/typing. Therefore I provided the caption to expose her to printed text and to provide the context of the event. That is very important to give an outsider the background as well as provide a model of meaningful text. You can see in that first paragraph where I first mentioned remnant book, it is hyperlinked to take you to a credible source to learn more about them and how to involve Brendan in the process. Let me know how it goes! :)
ReplyDeleteIs there anyway you could post a video of her using the remnant book. I'd love to see it in action as well as the use of her AAC device?
ReplyDelete