Pie chart visuals: Great social skills tool to help kids with ASD to talk MORE or LESS in groups or class

autism social skills speech therapy
For children on the autism spectrum who talk too much – or too little – in group situations, this is a useful visual strategy.

Pie Chart Spanish horizontal display for blog post

Children with autism who talk too much or too little in group situations

Neurotypical people find this skills difficult also!  Remember that person who would not stop talking at the last party you went to? Young people with autism spectrum disorders can find reciprocal conversation skills particularly perplexing.  They may say little or nothing on the playground or in class discussions.  Or they may hold forth in a lecture of monologue fashion, not noticing the signs that others  are becoming impatient.

Often, explaining a social skill combined with a meaningful visual will make a lot more sense for a child on the autism spectrum.  This particular visual can be very helpful.  If you make a few copies of the pie chart sheets below, I believe you will use them often.

How to create the pie chart visuals:

Follow the pdf download instructions below:

PDF blog insert

Pie chart prompts & directions

Grafico para la toma de turnos y conversaciones proporcionales en grupos

Polish language translation

How to use the pie chart visuals:

*Use simple language while describing the sheets.  For example:  “When people talk together, it’s like people sharing a pie [or cake or whatever in case the kid does not like pie!].  Everybody gets their turn to take their share.  If one person is talking too much and not letting others talk, it’s not fair.  He is “using up all the words.”  Also, if somebody is just listening and is not sharing their own thoughts and words with the others, that’s not good.  Everybody’s ideas are important.”

*One way to help a child who lectures and monologues in your class or group is to ask him to become your “helper.”  Prepare for him the blank circle sheet below, and divide it into the number of kids who are present in your class or group.  If you like, you can write into each “slice” the names of each person present.  Then, you can ask the child to shade in with a pencil the various slices as the various children speak.  This directs the attention of the monologuing child towards what others are saying and raises his awareness of proportion and reciprocity in group conversation.

I wish you success with this simple visual technique for helping kids with ASD to have better group conversation skills.

Joel Shaul, LCSW


Here is a related conversation social skills resource for reciprocity in conversation, but for when just two people are talking.

Using a Toy Balance for Talking Back & Forth

 


 

Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.


The Conversation Train Book

Green Zone Book Cover Click to Learn More

Helping kids with Asperger’s to give compliments: Worksheets for social skills teaching

worksheets for autism social skills teaching

There are many other resources on the website to help children with ASD to learn and practice giving compliments.

Here are several:

Compliment Picture Panels

Say Something Nice Board Game

Paper Fortune Teller for Compliments

How to Play Compliment Tag

Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.

 

 

The Conversation Train Book

Green Zone Book Cover Click to Learn More

Missing Objects Game–Social skills therapy for kids with ASD

This is an easy, fun and very useful social skills game to help kids on the autism spectrum to  learn how to encourage others.  Children on the autism spectrum often need help learning to use kind and encouraging words.  This is a “game within a game.”  The object is to remember what item is missing when it is removed when the player is not looking.  The underlying game is to “score” lots of encouraging remarks to the other player when they are playing and it is not your turn.

To download the encouragement word prompt cards for this activity, click HERE.

To download the on-screen / teletherapy version of this activity, click here.

To access the Boom Card version of this activity, click here.

  1. Assemble a collection of eight to twelve very small objects (very small toys, or even just assorted items out
    of a desk drawer).
     
     

     

    Missing Objects Game, a therapeutic game to teach children on the autism spectrum the social skill of encouraging others
    Here is the collection of random objects I keep handy so that I can play The Missing Objects Game with kids on the autism spectrum whenever I feel like it.
  2. Print out the Encouragement Word Prompts and keep them handy to display during the game.
  3. Tell the kids:

“We are going to play the Missing Objects Game.  This is a memory game that works like this.  I will place on the table these small objects.  When it is your turn, you will get one half a minute to look at the objects and try to remember them. Then, we will ask you to step out of the room for a few seconds.  While you are out, we will take away just one of the objects.  Then, you must try to figure out which object is missing!  This can be hard!While you are trying to remember what object is missing, the other kids have an important job.  They have to try their best to say nice things to you, to encourage you and to make you feel okay if you can’t figure out which object is missing.  I will keep track of who is being the nicest, and I will decide then who is first, second and third place at being nice and “encouraging” to the person who is trying to find the missing object.”

4.  Hold up the various encouraging phrase prompts to help the kids know what to say to the child who is trying to remember what is the “missing object.”

 I have found that kids really try hard to be the one who does the best “encouraging”  and that this becomes the main point of the game instead of correctly remembering the missing object.

Get out the encouragement prompts to use on other occasions when such skills are called for.

[Reference:  This is derived from a social skills book called Superskills, by Judith Couccouvanis.]

Joel Shaul, LCSW

Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.

The Conversation Train Book

Green Zone Book Cover Click to Learn More