Showing posts with label Adapted Books. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Adapted Books. Show all posts

"I Like Myself" Adapted Book with Symbol Support

Adapting books with symbols helps beginning or reluctant readers read more confidently because of the symbols that go along with the pictures! I use the Widgit Online software to create symbols for all my adapted books.

When I found this book, I knew it would be perfect to adapt! I love the message and feel like it is appropriate for all ages, my toddler loves it and I would have used this in my low incidence high school classroom as well.

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How to Prep Adapted Books for Special Education

I love making interactive / adapted books for my students! By giving students something tangible to interact with on each page, you promote engagement and can check for comprehension through out the story. 
Interactive / Adapted Books also give students a clear purpose for reading books if they don't see the value in reading yet. You can adapt the current books you have in your classroom by adding symbols or you can print and create your own books! Here's the steps I go through when putting together adapted books that I have printed.
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Adapted Book Symbols for Tangled: Kingdom of Color

I promised to share the symbols for this adapted book once I got 50 likes on this post to see if you guys were interested, and yes you were!
It's been a while since I've added an adapted book to my classroom, but when I saw this Tangled book, I just knew I had to! My girls will love this! (They haven't even had a chance to read it yet, I put it together and laminated it today and plan on binding it tomorrow, but I was just too excited to share it with all of you!)

Book: Tangled: Kingdom of Color - available on Amazon (affiliate link)
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for Kingdom of Color - available in PDF from me! :)

Once you have the book, just print the symbols, cut out, and glue over top of the words on each page.  Then laminate and bind. Super easy!


This page below accurately sums up how I am feeling about this spring weather we are finally getting!

Looking to adapt more books? I share the symbols of most of the books I adapt from my classroom, check them out here.

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Where is it? Things in my House ~ Adapted Books

I love functional adapted books, so I created this adapted book about where certain items are found in our house.

As much joy as I get some laminating and velcro-ing (no scarcism here, really, I do get excited about it), all that laminating and velcro takes time. So, one of the versions requires no laminating or velcro, but it still interactive. As you can see below, this is the version without velcro, and the student is expected to finish the sentence with the correct answer.
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Eric Carle Adapted Books and More - downloads for you!

A while back, I wrote this post about how to adapt books for students with special education. I've had some requests lately to share some symbols with you so you can create your own, and of course I will!! I have linked the book to Amazon (using affiliate links), sometimes you can find great deals online, especially used, but of course, it's better if you already have it or can find it at a thrift store of something!

Book: Polar Bear, Polar Bear, What Do You Hear? by Eric Carle
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for Polar Bear...+ pictures of the book for adapted pieces (I just copied one of the pictures from the google image, pasted in word and enlarged to an appropriate size)

Book: The Very Hungry Caterpillar by Eric Carle
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for The Very Hungry Caterpillar + pictures for adapted pieces (same method to use these as Polar Bear...). You'll also notice pages, such as the one pictured don't include all of the words, rather it simplifies it to "Wednesday, 3 plums."

Book: The Way I Feel by Janan Cain 
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for The Way I Feel - These are an added sentence for each page that follows the same format, "I feel ____ when ...."

Book: Frog's Lunch by Dee Lillegard
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for Frog's Lunch

Book: Dinosaur Days (Step into Reading) by Joyce Milton
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for Dinosaur Days - This one was created by one of my awesome paraprofessionals, John, who was kind enough to send this to me so I could share it with you! It has a sentence for each page, like a summary, as there are a lot of words on this one.

Want more? Be sure to check out this post for more symbols to add to existing books!
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Adapting Step-into-Reading Books with Symbols

So many of you loved the Frozen books symbols that I shared a while back, so I went through and saved a few more that I had created so I could share those with you as well!!!  I love adapting the step into reading books because they already have simple language, and so many of them are high interest to my students so they actually enjoy reading them. And, in my classroom, I consider Disney to be age appropriate (especially when compared to Teletubbies and Dora!)

I have linked the book to Amazon (using affiliate links) if you want to buy the book there and then you can download the symbols for free.

Book: A Dream for a Princess  - a Cinderella book
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for A Dream for a Princess

Book: Old, New, Red, Blue! - a Cars movie book
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for Old, New, Red, Blue!
*Since I only used the symbols for this book, the words typed out along with the symbols don't have proper punctuation and wording all of the time, so just use the symbols and you'll be good! See this book in this blog post on how to adapt books*

Book: Run, Remy, Run! - a Ratatouille book
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for Run, Remy, Run!

Book: Me Too, Woody!  - a Toy Story book
Symbols: Adapted Symbols for Me Too, Woody!

Get the Frozen book A Tale of Two Sisters and the adapted symbols here.

Adapting the books is really easy to do. All you need to do is cut out the symbols and then tape or glue them to the page. Sometimes I cover the words in the book (especially when they are a lot of words such as in A Dream for a Princess and A Tale of Two Sisters) and other times I cut out the symbols and paste them above or below the actual words in the books (in books like Me Too, Woody!Old, New, Red, Blue!, and Run, Remy, Run!). This is a great task to do while you are watching TV or something like that. You can still relax and tell yourself you're preparing for school :)
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Frozen Adapted Book with Symbols

I don't know about you, um, your class, but we are OBSESSED with Frozen right now :) So, of course, I bought this Step into Reading level 2 book A Tale of Two Sisters from Amazon (affiliate link) and added reading support symbols for my students. I love how adding symbols to a page gives my students SO much more confidence while reading and makes the task so much less daunting. Shoot, reading is even fun!!
Plus, the book itself is a pretty high motivator! If you happen to purchase this book as well, you can download the adapted symbols for A Tale of Two Sisters. Enjoy!

To put it all together, all I did was cut and paste the sentences directly over the words. Everything fit great and I didn't have to cover up any pictures. Plus, no laminating since I'm not adding removable pieces to this book. (update: I underestimated how much my students would love this book. It has since been laminated to keep it from falling apart!)
 Adapted Book - frozen
Frozen adapted book for special education 
Now, let's all sing "Let it go". Hm, now that could be a great starter for a behavioral social story, or song! Anyone up for writing it? :)
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Voice Volume 5 point scale Visuals

I have a couple of students who can get very loud when they are excited. This 5 point volume scale has been an extremely helpful tool to help those students regulate their volume. 

I have a large copy on my white board and smaller copies on two of my students' desks. I often redirect then to a level 3 voice.
5 point Volume Scale - Special Ed

I found this awesome book on Board Maker Achieve that explains each of the volume levels and when they are appropriate to use. I edited it a little bit to add pictures and just changed a couple of the words. I love the book because it helps explain to the student the purpose of the voice chart. And of course I love the interactive pieces, you all know how much I love my adapted books!
Volume Scale Book for Special Education

5 point volume scale book (Special Education)
teaching appropriate voice volume - adapted book
5 Point Volume Scale Book for Special Education
Voice Volume Chart adapted book for special education

Download the book here and the visual here. Do you use these or similar visuals in your classroom?

Join the conversation on Facebook about your favorite special education curriculum materials and get new ideas from everyone else! I'm trying to figure out what new materials to request for next year already.
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How to Adapt Books for Students with Autism / Special Needs

I have been creating tons of adapted books this year! Some of them I have written myself, such as my environmental print Fast Food book or the Shark Hygiene book. Other books I have taken apart, added symbols from Writing with Symbols or Board Maker, laminated, and added adapted pieces. I love making book interactive as it checks for comprehension and gives the student a clearer purpose for each page.
Here's a few of my adapted books. Hope they give you some ideas of all the possibilities!

A Very Hungry Caterpillar: I added exact words with symbols for all but the counting part - I simplified counting to Day of the Week, Number, Fruit. I found the pictures from the story online, laminated the book, bound it together, and added Velcro to the pieces.

Who Lives in the Arctic?: I love these simple scholastic readers! I added symbols on top of the words already written in the book. I found other pictures that describe the picture through clip art. This makes for a higher level comprehension, the student looks at the picture, the symbol, and has to then find the clip art of that same animal to add to the picture.

The Way I Feel: I added one sentence to each page (I feel ____ when _____). This is a great book for staff and students to read together. The staff reads all of the "regular" words, and the student can read the symbol sentence strip. The student chooses the correct feeling picture to add to each page.

My Messy Room: For this book, I also added the symbol right above the word. I love the adapted pieces for this book, because the sentences specify where the item goes (ex. I like my shirts on my dresser). This is one of my older books - before I discovered the book binding machine!!!

Cars book - Old, New, Red, Blue: This one I taped the symbols to each book. I have not laminating this one or added additional symbols. Not sure if I will, but it is a possibility. Adding the symbol to the story makes reading less intimidating for many of my students.

Frog's Lunch: Another book that I did not laminate or add interactive pieces too, just the symbols. How the words were on the page determined whether I covered them up or added the symbols on top or below (example: paragraphs, I covered the entire thing).

Fast Food Restaurants: And sometimes the book you want just doesn't exist, so you have to make it yourself, like I did with this Fast Food Restaurant book. (And if you want this book, you can find it here at my TPT store).

And those are just a small sample of my books in my classroom! So do you have any questions about adapting books? Or do you have any other ways that you adapt books? I'd love to hear about them!

To get symbols for some of these adapted books and others, check out my posts HERE for free symbols to download!
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Environmental Print - Fast Food Month!

I seriously have a love/hate relationship with my job right now. Anyone else know what I mean?

It's been so much fun planning new lessons/activities/centers/etc for my students and learning new kids and their learning styles and needs. But then there's the behaviors I'm trying to figure out, the aides I'm trying to organize/lead, and the paperwork. Ugh. But blogging about the fun stuff helps me keep a positive attitude and remember why I love teaching.

Onto some fun things - I am planning on doing one community trip a month with my students this year. And this month's field (at the end of the month) will be to a fast food restaurant. So this month's theme is going to be all about fast food. To start us off, I made an environmental print book all about fast food restaurants!
Each page has the predictable text, "I can eat at _____________" and then the restaurant on the page. This makes sure even my non-readers can read.
 Also, each page has adapted pieces that the student can match while reading the book. This helps aid in comprehension and gives the student something concrete to do while reading.
I also created a variety of worksheets including matching the logo, writing the words, finding all of one logo, etc. I hope to start using the worksheets next week and then move onto some menu options at each restaurant. My thought is to have my students choose what restaurant we will go to, so I'm curious to see which one they will pick.

Let me know if you have or know of any other fast food resources I could use this month!
Oh, and you can get this Fast Food book and worksheets on my TPT store :)
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