Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose: To increase understanding and sensitivity to children who have difficulty learning to read. 
Purpose: To increase understanding and sensitivity to children who suffer from obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD)
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose: To help students understand that many people, including those that they admire -- movie stars, politicians, scientists -- have disabilities.
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose: To help students learn the "etiquette" of treating people with disabilities with respect.
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose: To have the students think about stereotypes that are applied to people with and without disabilities, and why.
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose:This activity allows students to feel how frustrating it could be to have an intellectual disability, and what they can do to help these students to learn.
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose: The purpose of this activity is to help students understand what it is like to have trouble with fine motor coordination, and how students with this difficulty need more time and practice to learn how to move and complete some activities.
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose: The children will get an idea of what it is like when your brain knows what to do, and you know that you can do the activity, but you just can’t seem to get the answer out right.
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose: This activity can lead to discussions about stereotyping, cooperation, compassion, kindness and bullying.
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Purpose: (1) To explore the emotional effects of put-ups and put-downs, (2) To explore the links between put-downs and conflict, and (3) To explore how group members can be more supportive of each other
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week.
Try this activity with your afterschool group this week. Begin a conversation with your group about how some people with disabilities use other parts of their bodies to communicate.  "How do you communicate without words? Many people who are deaf use their hands to communicate.  They use signs and they also spell out words using a special alphabet called the fingerspelling alphabet."
Give one - or all! - of these activities a try with your afterschool group this week!
Try these two activities with your afterschool group this week. Start a discussion about people who cannot see, but can still learn how to read.  The human body can adapt to all types of disabilities.  A blind person can learn to read bumps.  The Braille alphabet is made up of a combination of bumps. 
On Sunday, April 18, 2010, from 1:00pm to 4:00pm, Ramapo for Children will bring together high-school-age youth from schools and agencies serving children with disabilities to honor and educate these young professionals.
For our first installment of Afterschool Activity of the Week, give this activity a try with your afterschool group this week. Bookmark this page and check back each week for more creative activities you can use at your afterschool program.
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