136 perfect bound pages Ages: 8 through adult Item CP-043 $32.95
Here you'll find techniques, materials and activities to help
students build classification and comparison skills as well as
to enhance their comfort in approaching social situations! This book takes the important mental operation, generalizing,
from grouping foods all the way to comparing social events. How is this done? So why not use these familiar techniques comparing dogs and cats
- to help our students with limited social skills compare social
events! That's exactly what this book does! Students will be more comfortable approaching social situations
if they're armed with a means of easily comparing two similar
social situations. Here's how you'll help them do this. First, encourage students who are weak in social skill areas to
compare different animals, buildings, and other common items that
are not associated with social situations. Use the comparison
techniques offered in the discussions of each of the categories. Then encourage these students to compare different social situations.
Students will recall comparing a lion and an deer, and realize
that, in a similar way, they can compare dining out at a fine
restaurant and eating out at a fast food restaurant! They can
systematically compare these dining experiences and focus on similarities
and differences. For example, what if a student frequently goes out to a favorite
casual style restaurant, then one day plans to go out to a more
formal restaurant? Using the format presented here he can compare
several aspects of casual and formal dining. He'll see that some
traits are common to both dining experiences, others are different.
Knowing similarities and understanding differences between a more
and a less familiar type of "dining out" can lessen his anxiety
in anticipating this novel social experience. You can easily help your students make these comparisons using
the materials in this book that focus on social situations - dozens
of them! For example, compare dining at a fine restaurant with a casual
diner.


Product Information Page
Generalizing
Students talk about general characteristics of members of a category
such as animals...

They talk about how two animals can be the same in some ways,
yet different in other ways...

Using graphic organizers they prepare to write about these comparisons...

Ten different categories are addressed in this way - hundreds
of pictures will help students classify, compare and write about
these categories.











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