Zabawy z dziećmi z opóźnionym rozwojem mowy/ afazją dziecięcą. Agata Gładowicz- Bojarska.

Autism/Communication Disorders — How to Teach Storytelling? How to Support Your Child? Simple Games, Verbal Gestures, and Therapy Ideas That Really Work. In today's episode, my guest is Agata Gładowicz-Bojarska, a speech therapist and trainer specializing in working with children with delayed speech development, aphasia, and communication disorders. Agata demonstrates how she practically implements naming games, disappearing games, movement, gestures, and simple aids to support children with delayed speech development, childhood aphasia, and communication disorders. This episode is full of concrete ideas you can use right away—in the office, at preschool, and at home. ⸻ In this video, you'll see: • how to work with a small number of words so your child can truly memorize them, • why repetition and verbal gestures are so effective, • how to combine one aid with multiple activities, • how simple objects (clips, Velcro, tubes, lights) become brilliant aids, • how to play to support language planning, coordination, and initiating communication, • how to adapt games for children with ASD, ORM, and aphasia, • why movement, rhythm, changes of pace, and the element of surprise are key in therapy, • when to introduce syllable groupings, two-syllable words, and clusters, and how to do it without overloading your child. ⸻ The most important message: You don't need 300 words or a full library of aids. You need 5 cards, movement, gesture, contact, and repetition. This is enough for the word to stick with your child—and to emerge in their speech. ⸻ Featuring: Joanna Pałasz — speech therapist, therapist, and creator of therapeutic aids Agata Gładowicz-Bojarska — speech therapist, trainer, and creator of the verbal gesture method FB/Blog: ologopedii.blog ⸻ 👉 VIP package with a tube of Velcro and other toys — available in our store: https://pareo.edu.pl/produkt/paczka-l... ⸻ If the video was helpful: leave a like subscribe to the channel let us know in the comments what games work for you Your ideas inspire the entire community of therapists and parents.