AAC Tips and Tricks
Tips and Tricks to support AAC users in daily settings
Quick Guide
Who are these AAC Tips and Tricks for?
These tips and tricks are for communication partners, such as:
- Peers
- Siblings
- Parents
- Caregivers
- Teachers
- SLPs
- Any communication partner in a AAC user's life
The best way to start AAC is to START:) Model the AAC system for the user in a meaningful activity and have fun!
Why are AAC Tips and Tricks beneficial for students?
If communication partners become more comfortable trying and modeling AAC then the AAC user will be more comfortable trying AAC. The more we integrate AAC into daily communication, the better it is for our AAC users. These tips and tricks are meant to make that modeling of AAC a little bit easier for the communication partners and the AAC user.
Tips and Tricks Videos
Top 3 Tips for Using AAC at Home
Reading With An AAC Device
Classroom and Home Environment Tips and Techniques
Here are 9 AAC facilitator tips to help with this goal.
- Provide Modeling or Aided Language Input (ALI)– ALI is modeling AAC style. Speak AAC to the AAC user.
- Use Scaffolding– Scaffolding is a verbal and visual strategy that has the facilitator build upon prior knowledge of the learner in order for the learner to integrate a new concept or skill. Model words and concepts to add information onto what the AAC user already knows and uses.
- Provide Expansions and Extensions– A form of modeling. Add a word to the spontaneous communication from the learner. The facilitator models a conceptual or grammatical word in the form of a model.
- Use Recasting– Recasts serve to add or correct information without obstructing the natural flow of communication. Recasting is another form of modelling. The recast occurs when the facilitator modifies a learners utterance by adding new or different grammar (syntactic) or word meaning information (semantic) information.
- Add Pause Time-Set up a communication opportunity and wait……Stop, look expectantly at the learner and wait. Use the ‘pregnant pause’ and be amazed at the spontaneous initiations you will get.
- Create Communication Opportunities– Set up situations that will make it most likely to elicit communication. Communication opportunities can also be called communication temptations. Think of bubbles with the cap closed, or toys in a closed container, or moving a favorite piece of furniture to a different location.
- Decrease Use of Questions– Questions tend to be demands to talk and not many people like demands in their conversational time. Questions tend to elicit one word answers rather than complex spontaneous utterances. Learn to elicit conversation by providing comments and using pause time rather than asking questions.
- Develop No-Tech Visual Strategies– No- tech visual supports can help with positive behavior, conversational skills, boundaries, and provide clear expectations.
- Provide Appropriate Feedback– Feedback guides learning by providing new information relative to the communication goal. Appropriate feedback may involve reinforcing ‘good ideas’, or may be an expansion and extension. It definitely corresponds to the intent of the communication message as well as the main goal. It does not correspond to ‘good talking’.
-By Robin Parker, SLP and Co-Founder of PrAACtical AAC
https://praacticalaac.org/praactical/9-tips-for-better-aac-communication-throughout-the-year/
Additional Resources
5 Things to Do When AAC Learners are Inconsistent
Learning a new way to communicate takes time! Quick read from an AAC expert that inconsistency is natural, expected, and part of the process.
Five Finger Modeling (ALS) made simple for AAC
Modeling made simple- Do's and Dont's
How to start Guided Access on a IPAD
Have a student who likes to escape out of the AAC app? Guided Access allows students to access only one app.
Helpful resources for families
This is a set of slides that has free resources that may be helpful for parental involvement and communication. This is only accessible to CPS logins so that you can go through and find the resource that fits your student's needs best.
How Peers Can Support AAC Use
How Peers Can Support AAC Use by Students with Significant Communication Needs
Modeling AAC at Home- For Beginners!
Modeling AAC at Home: A Beginner’s Guide for Parents
Low tech Option! Take a screen shot of an AAC IPAD
Do you want a low tech version of your student's AAC app on the IPAD- here's a quick run down of how to take screen shots of your AAC communication pages and share them to print. A quick way to get a personalized low tech AAC option!
12 Fun AAC Activities for the Classroom
Great ideas using features of AAC and assistive technology (ex. speech generating switch) to encourage inclusive fun and learning!
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