Transcription of A Workbook for Aphasia
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}
Cleveland State University A Workbook for Aphasia by Cat R. Kenney 1 A Workbook for Aphasia LANGUAGE SECTION WORDS -Cross out the word that is not in the same -Fill in the words in the correct -Convergent naming ..10 -Divergent naming ..12 -Multiple meaning -Compound -Rhyming words: match the words that -Collective SENTENCE STRUCTURE -Phrase -Sentence _____ COGNITION SECTION COMPREHENSION -Figurative language (idioms)..37 GENERAL KNOWLEDGE -Yes/no -Countries, states, cities (locations)..40 -Popular media (songs, movies, television shows, sports, literature)..42 MEMORY -Rote naming -Recalling details about self and -Recalling visual details /describing from 2 FUNCTIONAL SKILLS SECTION FUNCTIONAL SKILLS -Television -Monthly calendar -Cooking a -Daily -Spatial -Temporal -Functional math: grocery -Functional math and writing: writing checks, balancing a checkbook, addressing -Functional writing _____ PUZZLES -Einstein s logic -Simple MELODIC INTONATION -Song A BEDSIDE ANSWER BANK for LITERATURE REVIEW, RESOURCES and 3 INTRODUCTION Aphasia is relatively common: according to the American Speech-Language and Hearing Association, approximately one million people in America have Aphasia (2008).
--For a large selection of cognition-based worksheets, seek the Therapy Guide for Language and Speech Disorders volume 2, by Kathryn Kilpatrick. The Cognitive Linguistic Task Book by Nancy Helm-Estabrooks is also excellent. -- For a diverse, and nicely illustrated, workbook addressing functional tasks, you cannot do better
Domain:
Source:
Link to this page:
Please notify us if you found a problem with this document:
{{id}} {{{paragraph}}}