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- Tel: 0121 556 0854
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- Mesty Croft Primary St Luke's Road, Wednesbury, West Midlands, England, WS10 0QY
Learning to remember and then say the
names of three things
Why is this important?
Verbal understanding can be likened to a ‘list’ of things that need to be
remembered in order to carry out a task. If, for example, a three-word
instruction is given (e.g. ‘Wash doll’s face’), the child has to remember
‘wash’, ‘doll’ and ‘face’. If he/she can’t do this, it may be that auditory
memory is not yet sufficiently developed.
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What to do
• Gather together a selection of pictures of everyday things.
These could be cards or cut out from magazines.
• Place a few cards (i.e. four) face-down on the table.
• Choose three cards but don’t show them to the child.
• Look at the cards and say what they
are (e.g. ‘I’ve got a hat, a cup and a pencil’). Ask:
★ ‘Can you remember what cards I’ve got?’
• If the child is right, show your cards and reinforce:
★ ‘Well done! A hat, a cup and a pencil!’
• If the child finds it difficult or remembers only one or two items,
repeat what cards you have, emphasising the key words
(e.g. ‘I’ve got hat, cup and pencil’).
• Try the activity with some action pictures (e.g. ‘doll is sitting’, ‘boy
jumping bed’). Can the child copy these three-word phrases?