Sunday, April 24, 2011

Reposting: The Idiom Dictionary


It's been over a year and I figured I could go for a recycled post this week!  I am glad to report that my son's Idiom Dictionary is now well over one hundred pages long and growing and creating delight every week :)  So... here's what I wrote originally and I'll post some of the newer pages at the end!

http://www.idiomsite.com/

It doesn't take much scanning to get a feel for how many idioms we use.  So, it's quite understandable that children, who are learning the regular meanings for words, get confused when we throw in idiomatic expressions.  Often without realizing that we're saying something quite complicated, we'll pepper the conversation with mystery.   While idioms are particularly challenging for autistic kids due to their varying adherence to concrete thinking, learning idioms is a challenge for every kid and... a fun parenting opportunity too :)

Enter the idiom dictionary!

First:
Every week, I scan one of the sites and pick an idiom that refers to a concept within my son's conceptual grasp.  For example, I'll pick something like "back to square one" and skip things like "a bird in the hand is worth two in the bush".

Second:
I write it at the top of the page and write a description along with an example at the bottom of the page.

Third:
I search google images for something that can illustrate the idiom and make the idea stick in my son's head.

That's it.  It takes all of ten minutes to do a page and you gradually have a richer and richer dictionary.  (I'm up to something like 50 pages.) I tend to leave a print out of the newest page at his place at the table or somewhere else he'll run across it and I love to hear the glee with which he reads them.  He seems to think people must be kidding if they're saying such silly things, but he's learning!  I occasionally print out the whole thing to share and it's less than two dollars to get a quick binding at an office store.

So, a few examples:


























It's easy to see how much fun these can be and how easy it is to personalize them!  Cameron found the elephant ears quite amusing along with seeing pets he knew coming coming out of the sky :)  I've been quite impressed with the usefulness of the tool too.  Frequently, the lessons or component parts of idioms can be used as reference tools for a variety of otherwise unrelated explanations.





Here's to more fun parenting... and hoping I don't feel the need to put my real kiddo in the dog house too often :)


1 comment:

  1. Hello Lady Baker,
    I just this post about idioms, please keep it up.

    I would love to add my favorite idiom here which is:

    devil’s advocate
    Meaning: one who presents a counter argument

    Source: theidioms.com

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