Storytelling Strategies for Reaching and Teaching Children with Special Needs

More than 57 percent of the over 6 million American children with disabilities are in inclusive (i.e., general) classrooms; "self-contained" classrooms serve children whose disabilities are either more severe or disruptive. As much as 20 percent of the children in an inclusive classroom are identified as "disabled," with the highest percentage of these having learning disabilities. While most classrooms have at least one child with a disability, teachers often have little or no training in educating and caring for these children. The need for resources that support educators working with children with disabilities or social/emotional difficulties is clear.

This book fills this critical need, supplying school and public librarians, classroom and special area teachers, and storytelling teaching artists with storytelling strategies for reaching and teaching children with special needs in inclusive classrooms, self-contained classrooms, and public and school libraries. These full-text stories, essays, and lesson plans from experienced storytelling teaching artists provide educators with a wide range of adaptable storytelling and teaching strategies for specific disabilities and enable storytellers to discover news ways to perform their storytelling magic. The book also offers compelling real-life anecdotes that demonstrate the impact of these strategies in inclusive and self-contained classrooms; presents an introduction to the skills of storytelling, why they are useful, and how to use them; and includes suggested modifications for a wide range of disabilities as well as detailed resource lists.

1126358493
Storytelling Strategies for Reaching and Teaching Children with Special Needs

More than 57 percent of the over 6 million American children with disabilities are in inclusive (i.e., general) classrooms; "self-contained" classrooms serve children whose disabilities are either more severe or disruptive. As much as 20 percent of the children in an inclusive classroom are identified as "disabled," with the highest percentage of these having learning disabilities. While most classrooms have at least one child with a disability, teachers often have little or no training in educating and caring for these children. The need for resources that support educators working with children with disabilities or social/emotional difficulties is clear.

This book fills this critical need, supplying school and public librarians, classroom and special area teachers, and storytelling teaching artists with storytelling strategies for reaching and teaching children with special needs in inclusive classrooms, self-contained classrooms, and public and school libraries. These full-text stories, essays, and lesson plans from experienced storytelling teaching artists provide educators with a wide range of adaptable storytelling and teaching strategies for specific disabilities and enable storytellers to discover news ways to perform their storytelling magic. The book also offers compelling real-life anecdotes that demonstrate the impact of these strategies in inclusive and self-contained classrooms; presents an introduction to the skills of storytelling, why they are useful, and how to use them; and includes suggested modifications for a wide range of disabilities as well as detailed resource lists.

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Storytelling Strategies for Reaching and Teaching Children with Special Needs

Storytelling Strategies for Reaching and Teaching Children with Special Needs

Storytelling Strategies for Reaching and Teaching Children with Special Needs

Storytelling Strategies for Reaching and Teaching Children with Special Needs

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Overview

More than 57 percent of the over 6 million American children with disabilities are in inclusive (i.e., general) classrooms; "self-contained" classrooms serve children whose disabilities are either more severe or disruptive. As much as 20 percent of the children in an inclusive classroom are identified as "disabled," with the highest percentage of these having learning disabilities. While most classrooms have at least one child with a disability, teachers often have little or no training in educating and caring for these children. The need for resources that support educators working with children with disabilities or social/emotional difficulties is clear.

This book fills this critical need, supplying school and public librarians, classroom and special area teachers, and storytelling teaching artists with storytelling strategies for reaching and teaching children with special needs in inclusive classrooms, self-contained classrooms, and public and school libraries. These full-text stories, essays, and lesson plans from experienced storytelling teaching artists provide educators with a wide range of adaptable storytelling and teaching strategies for specific disabilities and enable storytellers to discover news ways to perform their storytelling magic. The book also offers compelling real-life anecdotes that demonstrate the impact of these strategies in inclusive and self-contained classrooms; presents an introduction to the skills of storytelling, why they are useful, and how to use them; and includes suggested modifications for a wide range of disabilities as well as detailed resource lists.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781440853654
Publisher: ABC-CLIO, Incorporated
Publication date: 11/21/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 218
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Sherry Norfolk, an award-winning storyteller, author, and teaching artist, performs and presents nationally and internationally.

Lyn Ford is an Ohio Alliance for Arts Education and Kennedy Center's OSBCI teaching artist and the author of two Anne Izard Storytellers' Choice Award-winning books: Affrilachian Tales: Folktales from the African-American Appalachian Tradition and Beyond the Briar Patch: Affrilachian Folktales, Food, and Folklore.

Table of Contents

Foreword: The Science behind the Startling Power and Effectiveness of Storytelling Kendall Haven xi

Acknowledgments xvii

Introduction Sherry Norfolk Lyn Ford xix

1 Storytelling: What? Why? How? 1

Introduction Sherry Norfolk 1

What Is Storytelling? Orature as a Very Special Gift Lyn Ford 2

Why Storytelling? Sherry Norfolk 4

What Happens When Storytelling Enters the SPED Classroom? One School District's Experience with Storytelling in Special Education Dr. Mollie E. Bolton 7

Notes for Storytellers: A Little Preparation Goes a Long Way Donna Washington 13

A Language of Empathy: Etiquette of Interaction with Disabilities Lyn Ford Sherry Norfolk 17

Notes for Teachers: Storytelling Tips and Techniques Sherry Norfolk 20

A Story Is Coming! Modeling and Nurturing Effective Audience Behaviors through Adaptable Storytelling Openings (Skill Levels: Pre-K through Grade Two) Lyn Ford 24

2 Storytelling Strategies for Children with Emotional/Behavioral Disabilities 31

Introduction Lyn Ford 31

Yipes! I'm Going to Special School District! Annette Harrison 32

A Wish Granted Asha Sampath 39

Getting Real: Public School Residencies Judith Black 42

Thinking beyond Violence: First Steps toward Peace Sherry Norfolk 47

Incorporating the Five Senses in the Autism Classroom: How to Spice Up "The Gingerbread Man" Katie Knutson 50

Programming for Children with Special Needs Emily Nanney 56

Sensory Storytime at the Denver Public Library Rachel Hartman 62

3 Storytelling Strategies for Children with Intellectual/Developmental Disabilities 69

Introduction Sherry Norfolk 69

My Story, My Voice: Storytelling with Nonverbal Students Dr. Amanda M. Lawrence 70

Making Meaning from Images: Predict and Infer Sherry Norfolk 76

On-the-Fly Tales: Creating Stories with Young Children Jeri Burns (The Storycrafters) 80

Sing Me a Story: The Language of Music for Students with Verbal Challenges Cherri Coleman 86

Storytelling to Improve Literacy Learning (and Self-Esteem!) Sherry Norfolk 92

Can Every Student Tell a Story? Making Storytelling Accessible for Everyone! Darlene Neumann 97

The Wide Mouthed Frog: Understanding Setting in Story Sherry Norfolk 103

Accessible Aesop: Fables for the Best in Us (Skill Levels: Grades Two through Five) Lyn Ford 110

4 Storytelling Strategies for Children with Physical Disabilities 115

Introduction Lyn Ford 115

Storytelling with Children Who Are Deaf or Hard of Hearing Erika Van Order Geneva Foster-Shearburn 116

The March Wind: Interaction and Adaptation for Children with Physical Disabilities (Grades K through Four) Lyn Ford 120

Storytelling with Children Who Have a Visual Impairment Christine Moe 123

Paths to Literacy: Adapting "The Three Little Pigs" for a Learner with Dual Sensory Impairment (Deafblindness) Betty Braun 126

5 Storytelling Strategies for Children with Multiple Disabilities 129

Introduction Sherry Norfolk Karen Young 129

Multisensory Storytelling with Children with Complex Additional Needs Ailie Finlay 131

Scaffolding Learning for Children with Multiple Disabilities Sherry Norfolk 138

The Magic Tree: Creating Engagement through Interactive Storytelling Sheila Wee 141

Touching Stories: Connecting to Students with Cognitive Disabilities through Multisensory Storytelling Gwen Bonilla 149

Stories in Motion: Creating the Path to Inclusion Cassandra Wye 155

6 Strategies for Inclusive Classrooms and General Audiences 165

Introduction Lyn Ford 165

They Didn't Tell Me Some of These Kids Are "Special": What to Do with a Mixed Audience Patty Carleton 166

Talking about Those Bears: Folktales for Social Considerations in the Special or Inclusive Classroom Lyn Ford 172

Spinning the Words: Deliberate Storytelling for Framing Vocabulary in the Minds of Scholars Ken Wolfe 176

Teach Them to Fly: Creating On-Ramps to Learning in the Inclusive Kindergarten Class Sherry Norfolk 182

To Boo or Not to Boo: Spooky Stories for Middle School Students as the First Step on a Path to Prereading, Reading, and Writing Lyn Ford 188

Inclusive Embodied Storytelling Strategies: Power Words Arianna Ross Suzanne Richard 194

Oral Communication and Narrative Formatting: Five Everyday Ways to Share Storytelling in the Special Needs or Inclusive Classroom-Show, Tell, Read, Reflect, Share Lyn Ford 199

Index 205

About the Editors and Contributors 211

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