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OverviewThis book is a practical guide to implementing the Intensive Interaction Approach in a school setting and provides essential technical support to teachers and practitioners from nursery to Post-16 who want to embed it into their classroom practice. Geared mainly towards supporting children with communication and social-communication difficulties arising from autism or learning difficulties, the principles apply equally to students of all levels of cognitive ability who struggle with social situations and emotional or sensory regulation. The Intensive Interaction Classroom Guide brings together contributions from experienced teachers, teaching assistants, and headteachers, who reflect on their practice and share practical tips to facilitate social-communication development within a nurturing classroom environment. Offering practical advice on curriculum and pedagogy and drawing on case studies, authors address key themes on a practical level, while grounding their discussions theoretically and methodologically. Filled with practical advice and techniques, this book will be essential to anyone working in classroom settings with students who experience social-communication difficulties or need a nurturing approach to emotional well-being. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Amandine Mourière , Pam SmithPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.453kg ISBN: 9780367773304ISBN 10: 0367773309 Pages: 172 Publication Date: 21 September 2021 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of Contents1. Introduction 2. The Story of Intensive Interaction 3. What Do Students with Autism and Learning Disabilities Need to Learn? 4. Intensive Interaction as a Teaching and Learning Approach 5. My Journey to Intensive Interaction in the Early Years Foundation Stage 6. Developing a Whole-school Approach to Using Intensive Interaction to Promote Social Communication and Well-being 7. Intensive Interaction within the General Communication Curriculum 8. Intensive Interaction within our Holistic and Child-centred Approach at Brøndagerskolen 9. Developing the Fundamentals of Communication Through Free-flow Play 10. Intensive Interaction and Birth Process Central Curriculum Access 11. Touch: The Cement that Binds Us 12. Management Issues: Ensuring a School is Intensive Interaction Friendly 13. Ensuring Access to Intensive Interaction through Education Health and Care Plans 14 Getting It Right with Recording Intensive InteractionReviewsEmbedding Intensive Interaction at the heart of a school's educational, pastoral and care provision should be seen as a vital element in meeting our children's special educational needs. This book offers reflective, insightful and practically useful perspectives and resources that can significantly help in this process. Setting each individual child at the very centre of their own social and communicative development is what Intensive Interaction undoubtedly delivers; this book will help schools and teaching staff alike to more effectively meet that challenge. - Graham Firth, Intensive Interaction Institute Associate & Founding Director. Intensive Interaction IS communication, and this book illustrates this very clearly. In the 70's, when I started in SEN, we quickly realised behaviour modification was not right for our students. We began using music and dance, symbols and timetables, plus social stories. We also began to realise how much our students - and their families - could teach us! Maybe this was the beginning of II...which has now been refined to the professional standard illustrated by the many contributors to this book. Importantly, it has not lost any of its spontaneity or its child-centred emphasis. - Ruth Buchan, former Headteacher Freemantle School. It has been a long time since Kellett and Nind's 'Implementing Intensive Interaction in Schools' did what it said on the box and became every I.I. Coordinator's go-to reference, so it is great to see the arrival of 'The Intensive Interaction Classroom Guide' which gives a range of contexts to the experiences of practitioners now using Intensive Interaction in classrooms. It contains some especially helpful and current references to EYFS, ECHPs and Ofsted that both lone practitioners and coordinators in schools will find reassuring and useful. - Dr Mark Barber, Consultant in Profound Intellectual Disability & Severe Communication Impairment in Australia. Embedding Intensive Interaction at the heart of a school's educational, pastoral and care provision should be seen as a vital element in meeting our children's special educational needs. This book offers reflective, insightful and practically useful perspectives and resources that can significantly help in this process. Setting each individual child at the very centre of their own social and communicative development is what Intensive Interaction undoubtedly delivers; this book will help schools and teaching staff alike to more effectively meet that challenge. - Graham Firth, Intensive Interaction Institute Associate and Founding Director Intensive Interaction IS communication, and this book illustrates this very clearly. In the 70s, when I started in SEN, we quickly realised behaviour modification was not right for our students. We began using music and dance, symbols and timetables, plus social stories. We also began to realise how much our students - and their families - could teach us! Maybe this was the beginning of II...which has now been refined to the professional standard illustrated by the many contributors to this book. Importantly, it has not lost any of its spontaneity or its child-centred emphasis. - Ruth Buchan, former Headteacher Freemantle School It has been a long time since Kellett and Nind's 'Implementing Intensive Interaction in Schools' did what it said on the box and became every I.I. Coordinator's go-to reference, so it is great to see the arrival of 'The Intensive Interaction Classroom Guide' which gives a range of contexts to the experiences of practitioners now using Intensive Interaction in classrooms. It contains some especially helpful and current references to EYFS, ECHPs and Ofsted that both lone practitioners and coordinators in schools will find reassuring and useful. - Dr Mark Barber, Consultant in Profound Intellectual Disability and Severe Communication Impairment in Australia Author InformationAmandine Mourière is a freelance autism and learning disability consultant and a Team Leader at the Intensive Interaction Institute. Pam Smith is the autism support teacher and Intensive Interaction Coordinator at two Surrey special schools. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |