All posts tagged: spring

A Little Literacy, Please: Flit, Float, Fly.

By Leslie Lindsay April showers bring May flowers…and so does JoAnn Early Macken, author of Flip, Float, Fly…Seeds on the Move.  When I first came across this darling picture book for children, I was a participant in the Write-by-the-Lake Summer Retreat in Madison, Wisconsin.  Ms. Early-Macken was presenting a session on writing children’s storybooks–which all have 32 pages, and some kind of rhyme or lilt about them.  (Don’t ask me much more, as I didn’t take her workshop.  I was too busy with adult fiction.  But I did buy her book for my then 7-year old garden lover). I love the simple, heirloom-quality illustrations, paired with Early-Macken’s gently swaying prose, this book is hands-down a spring-time favorite at our house.  Readers–parents and children alike–will learn how seeds use ingenious methods to travel to new places to put down roots.  I abolutely adore her use of ontomonapeoas (that is, words that sound like the sound they make in real life), crunch, crackle, fling, pop!  Plop!  SWISH… A fun book to read this spring while teaching your kiddos …

Apraxia Monday: Gnoming for Words

By Leslie Lindsay Looking for some crafty things to do with your children during the winter months?  This one lends well to the spring season as you can make these Hobbit-inspired homes now, and then spray with that really great preservation stuff and place in a protected area of your yard/porch to attract little fairies and gnomes.  Perfect for that Irish-themed holiday right around the corner!    Now, don’t get wrong, this is not a how-to post on creating your own gnome homes, rather it’s a lesson on how to incorporate speech-language skills into your projects.            Rule #1:  You don’t have to be an artist.  Repeat that.  You don’t have to be an artist.                 Rule #2:  It’s about the process, and not the finished art piece           Rule #3:  Grab your child(ren).            Rule #4:  It’s okay to get messy, encouraged even.  (Wear old clothes or a smock)           Rule #5:  Have fun! Now for that part about how to incorporate speech work into your crafting.  For children of all ages and all skill levels, you can begin …