How to Pick Activities for Asperger's Children
Instructions
-
-
1
Choose books with some kind of interactive component. Pop-up books, books with colorful pictures or interesting textures can get him engaged while he learns new words.
-
2
Go to the park. Exercise is a great way for Asperger's kids to blow off steam. Playgrounds and jungle gyms provide a chance to improve motor skills, and she can have fun amusing herself on slides, merry-go-rounds and swings.
-
3
Watch TV or movies together and talk about how the characters interact. You can point out the use of sarcasm in a sitcom, or explain why somebody cries in a drama. This can act as a kind of tutorial that will help your child pick up on social queues.
-
4
Keep puzzles around. Children with Asperger's syndrome usually need to develop their spatial skills. Puzzles or models of any sort are a fun way to get the child working with his hands and thinking about how things fit together.
-
5
Play board games together. This provides social interaction, but does so in a structured way that Asperger's kids tend to be more comfortable with. And, as with all children, games help kids learn to handle defeat.
-
6
Sing together. Studies have shown that music can have a powerful socializing effect on Asperger's children; and, like everybody else, they have an easier time learning words when they are set to music.
-
1