Pictello for Story Sequencing and Language

The Skinny: Pictello is a great app for story sequencing and basic language.  You easily create visual stories and talking books on your iPad or iPhone.  Our speech therapist recommended this years ago, and we still use it to do a simple scrapbook of any trip we go on.  However, we started by simply documenting an excursion we might go on during an afternoon.  Essentially, each page is a simple photo pulled from your phone, and a caption for that event.  Put a half-a-dozen of these together and share them with your family!  The program has a nice read-along feature that will read what you write, so your kid can practice hearing the correct language about a subject they want to know about.  And, once you are finished, you can share it!

What it is: Pictello

What it’s used for: Story Sequencing and Language

Ways to use it:

  • Story Sequencing:
    • Start simple.  Do a task around the house and take a photo for each step.  i.e. feeding the dog.  First photo of the dog, “Fido is hungry”; 2nd photo, “I’m feeding the dog”; 3rd photo, “Fido is eating his food”.  It’s really simple, but gets the basic steps across for an activity that he or she can related directly too.
    • And complexity.  This piece goes on and on to wherever you want to take it.  Have it cover an entire day’s worth of activities.  Or the weekend trip to Disneyland or visiting the Grandparents.
    • Share it with friends and family.  This something your child can be proud of, make sure everyone recognizes them for it!

Where to find it: Apple App Store.  Can be used on both iPhone and iPad.

The Source: Our speech therapist.

 

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Pictello for Story SequencingPictello for Story Sequencing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Pictello for Story Sequencing and Language was originally published on KidConnectionZ

Celebrity Impersonations of Hamlet’s To be or not to be Speech

I recently came across a great video through Twitter that is pretty impressive.  Jim Meskimen is a professional impersonator and he spun together a great 2 minute video that’s both engaging and original.  He was able to perform the famous, To be or not to be monologue from Hamlet with about 25 different famous celebrity impersonations.  You can follow Jim on Twitter at: @jimrossmeskimen

You can see the video here:

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And Jim has another Shakespeare from celebrity impersonations below.  This one has been seen almost 1 million times!  Not too shabby!

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Celebrity Impersonations of Hamlet’s To be or not to be Speech was originally published on Shakespeare for Kids Books

Shake Phrase in a Box – Classroom Activity

Here’s a great idea from @DetroitSamWhite, whom I met in the twitterverse.  A great way to introduce kids to Shakespeare and realize the impact that The Bard’s language had on the rest of the world is to play a little game with your kids called, Shake Phrase.  As many of you know, all of my books are sprinkled with common Shakespeare phrases that kids will hear throughout life.  Well, with Shake Phrase, you write down dozens of these common phrases and words and put them in a box.  BUT, the 2nd part is to put another dozen or so of other common phrases, not done by Shakespeare in the same box.  Now, Shake Phrase: shake the box and pull a phrase, the kids have to guess if they are from Will or not.  As @DetroitSamWhite says, “blows their minds :-)”

Do a few phrases each day and they will quickly “start learning that many of the phrases they hear and use are Shakespeare quotes.”

It’s almost like Catch Phrase for Shakespeare!

Drop me a line and let me know if you have a great classroom activity for engaging kids with the Bard.  I always like to share great ideas like Shake Phrase.

 

Shake Phrase

Shake Phrase in a Box – Classroom Activity was originally published on Shakespeare for Kids Books

13 Words first penned by Shakespeare

As we all know, Shakespeare wrote a lot of words.  Many of which he made up on the fly, or simply was the first one to actually write them done.  Regardless, he alone added somewhere upwards of 5,000+ words and phrases to the English language.  Some of these, we use every day.  Here’s a list of 13 words first penned by Shakespeare:
13 words penned by Shakespeare

Gloomy

Quote: “Forced in the ruthless, vast, and gloomy woods?” – Titus Andronicus

Laughable

Quote: “Though Nestor swear the jest be laughable.” – The Merchant of Venice

Majestic

Quote: “This is a most majestic vision” – The Tempest

Lonely

Quote: “Believe’t not lightly – though I go alone / Like to a lonely dragon that his fen -Coriolanus

Radiance

Quote: “For by the sacred radiance of the sun” – King Lear

Hurry

Quote: “Lives, honors, lands, and all hurry to loss.” – Henry VI Part 1

Generous

Quote: “Free me so far in your most generous thoughts / That I have shot mine arrow o’er the house / And hurt my brother.” – Hamlet

Frugal

Quote: “Chid I for that at frugal Nature’s frame?” – Much Ado About Nothing

Critical

Quote: “For I am nothing if not critical” – Othello

Courtship

Quote: “To courtship and such fair ostents of love” – The Merchant of Venice

Zany

Quote: “Some carry-tale, some please-man, some slight zany” – Love’s Labour’s Lost

Undress

Quote: “Madam, undress you and come now to bed.” – The Taming of the Shrew

Rant

Quote:”I’ll rant as well as thou.” – Hamlet

 

13 Words first penned by Shakespeare was originally published on Shakespeare for Kids Books