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SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS - IN THE PLAYGROUND |

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IN THE PLAYGROUND ....................................
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When there is a child with a disability in your school, having that child fully involved in the classroom program is only half the story.
It is also the school's (and that means the whole school) responsibility to try to ensure that the child is as fully involved as is possible in playground activities as well, i.e. at lunchtime and playtime.
A child who, from Grade 1, has less opportunity to talk and play with schoolmates in the playground will have more difficulty developing appropriate social skills. With inadequate social skills, the problem obviously grows.
Play is important!

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WHAT TO DO
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- (1) Access. If access to the appropriate play area is difficult, can the teacher-on-duty take responsibility to escort the child to that play area? Or can older students be rostered to do this? Can a more accessible area be made available to that Grade?
- (2) Encouraging/facilitating appropriate play. Sometimes it may be possible for a teacher-on-duty to suggest or encourage games in which the child with a disability can join in. This is not to limit the other children, but to encourage games which they can all enjoy.

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GOOD IDEAS
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Try to tune in to whatever games are popular now. It may only take a small modification to make it suitable for all the children.
Ask the children for ideas - both the child with the disability and his classmates. They will often have the best ideas about what games will work, or how to modify them.
These are just a few ideas to start with. Remember, the teachers in the schools are the ones who see the myriad of games which children play. YOU probably have lots of good ideas!
- Cubbyhouses - usually of bushes in the school ground.
- Can it be made accessible?
- Imaginative play - each child making believe he is someone/something/somewhere else.
- Walking tiggy - instead of running to chase each other, a different type of gait is set (so not as fast moving). Alternatively you may add extra rules about using lines or markings on the ground to limit the pace or area of the game.
- Ball games - e.g. handball (i) against brick wall so a missed ball does not take so long to retrieve and (ii) having a designated catcher, to retrieve missed balls. There are usually kids watching a game, so it is often easy to find a willing catcher. (Be careful not to give TOO MUCH assistance).
- Modified ball games - e.g. grip ball
- Sevenies - ball games against a wall.
- Piggy-in-the-middle type games.
- "Simon says."
- "Traffic lights"

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SUMMARY
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If the classmates are playing active games, then the child with a disability should too, whenever possible.
When this isn't practical, sedentary activities such as "Where's Wally?" books, or board games may be good lunchtime activities.
It is sad to hear of children, especially young children, spending lunchtime in the library, even if it is their choice. It only magnifies the social isolation, so they feel even more uncomfortable trying to join in, in the playground.


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SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS - IN THE PLAYGROUND |

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