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Lego Bricks

Lego™ Club is a fun, Lego™-themed group that is designed to build the social competence of children with autism spectrum disorder and social communication difficulties. Through participation in Lego™ Club children learn and practice a range of social skills such as:

  • working in a team
  • sharing and turn-taking
  • negotiating appropriately with peers
  • giving and listening to instructions
  • using eye contact and appropriate body language
  • having conversations
  • enjoying playing together to achieve a goal

Read more: Set up and run a Lego™ Club at your school

Play

  • Pretends to talk on the telephone
  • Gives a response to 'give me a high five'
  • Puts sequences of play together e.g. puts man in the car, drives the car up to the garage, puts petrol in the car, pays the money and drives away
  • Begins to act out familiar sequences from book or TV shows e.g. pretends to be Fireman Sam putting out a fire

Understanding

  • Points to actions in pictures e.g. show me the boy swimming
  • Understands big / little
  • Responds to simple questions e.g. what is that? where is your ball?
  • Identifies several items by function e.g. which one do you read?

Spoken Language

  • Uses three-four word sentences frequently
  • Uses action words e.g. running, jumping, eating, playing
  • Names three common colours
  • Uses plurals e.g. cars, socks, books
  • Uses position words e.g. in, on
  • Says if boy or girl
  • Counts to three

When to seek advice:

  • If your child does not show interest in other people
  • If your child's play is limited to lining up toys
  • If your child shows repetitive behaviours e.g. turning light switches on and off
  • If your child is not joining words together in sentences
  • If your child is not following two-step instructions
  • If you can't understand 50% of what your child says to you

 

Children who have difficulty with /l/ generally replace the sound with /w/ e.g. lion becomes wion. The error is made due to incorrect placement of the mouth to produce the sound.

Here are some ways to help a child produce the /l/ sound:

1. Instruct the child to put the tip of their tongue behind their top teeth (see figure 1). Check the position with a mirror. Ask the child to raise and lower their tongue several time to practice moving their tongue into the correct position. Ask the child to say /la/. Encourage the child to 'smile' as they say the sound to make sure that their lips do not move into a rounded /w/ position.

2. Have the child practice this sequence of sounds /t/-/d/-/n/-/l/. Shape /l/ from /t/ e.g. /ta-la/, then /d/ e.g. /da-na/ and then /n/ e.g. /na-la/.

3. Describe to the child the different mouth positions for /l/ and /w/. /l/ is a sound made with your tongue behind your top teeth; /w/ is a sound made by your lips 'kissing lips'. Practice moving from a /l/ to a /w/ sound so that the child can feel the difference in mouth placement. Use this information when practicing saying /l/ words e.g. What did your mouth do at the start of the word - was your tongue up or did you use your kissing lips?

Figure 1. Tongue position for /l/.

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