1. Your name, email, and TpT store if you have one. If not, feel free to leave me your blog link.
Natalie Boatwright, justwrightspeech@gmail.com, TPT Store: Just Wright Speech, blog link: www.justwrightspeech.blogspot.com
3. What is your favorite population
to work with?
I love working with the
school-age population, PK-5th grade.
4. How much time per week do you spend blogging and/or creating materials?
Since I started on January 4,
I’ve only been able to spend an average of 10-12 hours per week.
Blogging/creating materials in an electronic way are fun, but takes time to
learn. Working full time in the public schools and having two young children
myself, four years & two years, doesn’t allow for a lot of “extra” time. I
will get more efficient as time goes on.J I look forward to this new
journey!
5. What's your favorite topic to
create materials for?
I like to make materials that can
be used with a story book. There is so much language within books and the
children respond to books very well. To relate articulation activities to story
books is fun too. It allows the student time to hear the target sounds within a
story format rather than at the level on which they are working, i.e. sound,
phrase, and sentence. 6. What's the best thing about blogging?
Thus far, the best thing has been
being able to share with others. My page is very new, as you know, so I haven’t
had many view my page, but to those who have, I hope it was helpful!
7. Do you have any blogging tips?
My advice, to new bloggers
especially, would be to take your time and do not stress over the small things.
I consider my blog a “work in progress” and will be making changes/edits/additions
as I learn how to do so. Happy blogging!
There are lots, but to choose one…It
was a time, not about what was said, but what was taught. One of my students showed
me how to do something on the iPad…and to see the look on his face when he
realized he had showed me something he knew that I hadn’t was priceless!
1. Your name, email, and TpT store
if you have one. If not, feel free to leave me your blog link.
Hi all—my name is Leslie Lindsay, R.N., B.S.N. and while I am not a speech-language
pathologist, I a mom raising a child with resolving (once severe) CAS—and
author of SPEAKING OF APRAXIA: A Parent’s Guide to Childhood Apraxia of Speech (WoodbineHouse, 2012 www.woodbinehouse.com) . I am an avid blogger since 2009 at
www.leslie4kids.wordpress.com …it’s “Practical Parenting…with a Twist!”
2. When and why did you start
blogging?
I was reluctant to the blog world back in 2009—I
didn’t think anyone would bother reading what I wrote. I was wrong!
Plus, I was naïve about just how “big” the Internet has become. Everyone reads stuff on the Internet.
I love, love working with kids and educators the
best. Even better if I have a connection
with an author who has written a book or article about kids and education.
That sort of combines all three of my passions: kids, education, and writing. But, I would be lying if I didn’t say I have
a special affinity for CAS.
4. How much time per week do you
spend blogging and/or creating materials?
I blog Monday thru Friday, aiming for 5 posts each
with a different theme. Like everyone
else, I’m busy so I don’t always get a post out a day—I’d be happy with three
solid posts. How much time…well, it all
depends, but I would say an average of 40 minutes a post.
5. What's your favorite topic to
create materials for?
I’d have to say that I love working on new ways to
help our kids work through self-esteem or coping with a speech impediment. That really ties into my Monday (Apraxia
Monday) and Tuesday (The Teacher is Talking) posts.
The best thing about blogging….well, it’s tri-fold: 1) I
love to write and I am very much a ‘processor.’
I have got to get my thoughts and ideas “out” or I go nuts! Sometimes blogging is the best way to do
it. 2)
Connecting with others in the blogosphere also tickles my fancy. I love to make connections that I may have
missed out on had I not been blogging.
3) I’d like to think that some of
my posts help others out there…guess that goes along with #2 above. But, when I get a response from a reader who
tells me that they love what I wrote, or what I shared helped their child, it’s
like I am giving back.
7. Do you have any blogging tips?
Set a routine.
Blog every day at the same time of day in the same location. You will prime your brain to work creatively
at those times. Pick several topics you
are most passionate about and let them be your “columns.” Write about similar things on the same days
of the week. Crafty Wednesday, or
Alliteration Monday, or Therapy Trick Tuesday…you get the idea. Readers will come back for their
favorites.
My daughter with CAS was at the mall around late
February/early March. She was nibbling
on a cookie with her dad and little sister.
She looked up and saw a giant white bunny sitting in a spring-y little
cottage. Her eyes grew as large as
saucers as she pointed, “Daddy…no ho-ho…big hop-hop!” We still giggle about that today, many years
later.
Thanks for having me! !
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