Candle logo long crop
Candle logo long crop

At CandLE Every Student CAN!

CandLE supports students with disabilities to reach their full learning and communication potential. We specialise in teaching and supporting students who use AAC and assistive technology.

Latest News

AAC Books

FREE Christmas Giveaway! Christmas Decorations Activities in Grid 3!

To celebrate the season we are giving away some fun Grid 3 Christmas decoration activities. We would love to see you sharing pictures and videos enjoying the resources. Don’t forget to tag us on social media @CandLEAAC.  These CandLE AAC grids are compatible with Grid 3 on a computer, iPad or AAC device – you can download a free trial of Grid 3 from the Smartbox website if you would like to try them out. Merry Christmas from CandLE AAC! Download Christmas Giveaway Here!

Read More »
Free Downloads

FREE Halloween / Autumn AAC Giveaway!

To celebrate the season we are giving away a set of fun Grid 3 Halloween / Autumn activities. This includes labelling and sequencing activities, a pumpkin art activity, a Halloween story book, and more.  We would love to see you sharing pictures and videos enjoying the resources. Don’t forget to tag us on social media @CandLEAAC.      These CandLE AAC grids are compatible with Grid 3 on a computer, iPad or AAC device – you can download a free trial of Grid 3 from the Smartbox website if you would like to try them out.     Happy Halloween from CandLE AAC! Download Halloween Giveaway Here!

Read More »
Podcast

CandLE Launch AAC Podast!

CandLE recently launched our official podcast. In episode 1 Marion Stanton and Annamaria of CandLE talk with student Jack Bennett about his experiences as a student who uses AAC, his aspirations, and what he expects from teachers who offer him education.  

Read More »
Articles

Adaptation for students in mainstream schools who may benefit from AAC, (Augmentative and Alternative Communication).

Adaptation for students in mainstream schools who may benefit from AAC, (Augmentative and Alternative Communication). Author: Marion Stanton Pre-requisites to learning:   It is important that students who rely on AAC have access to textbooks, teacher’s PowerPoints, worksheets, and any other materials that their peers have access to. They need independent means to engage with learning materials so that their learning can develop through repetition with variety, reminders, and practice. Finally, they need a means to record their answers.    This is best achieved using an on-screen keyboard with word-prediction making the learning of literacy essential. However, symbol-based vocabularies and/or answers from multiple choice options may also be appropriate. Multiple choice particularly enables the student to keep up with the pace of the classroom.   The aim is to for the student to achieve maximum independence in the most time effective manner exerting the least physical effort. Once a student’s access is optimised, we can be surprised by how much they can achieve. They key to supporting students who rely on AAC is to ensure that their working memory is optimised. Working memory is the facility we all use to manipulate information to arrive at an answer. It only lasts approximately 15 seconds for any of us, so it is crucial that a student is only expected to have a maximum of 15 seconds thinking time for each question or part of a question they are working on. An example would be a two-stage mental arithmetic sum such as 10-5+2=7. The student needs to take 5 from 10 but they also need to hold +2 in their working memory to retrieve and answer.    Long-term memory is where we store what we remember without having to think. An example of this is committing the times tables to memory. However, to achieve this a non-disabled student will, for 10×10 multiplication table spend anywhere between 20 hours and 200 hours, spread out over the course of 1 to 5 years of regular “drilling”, which should really be a combination of instant recall, finding shortcuts, and speed training . It is highly likely that this would be a significant challenge for a student who relies on AAC so it could be argued that having a multiplication table to consult or a calculator is a reasonable adjustment for students who rely on AAC.   Working memory is compromised by the need to use AAC as it is a much slower process than speech or free writing. It is therefore essential that students who rely on AAC are given ways of working that mitigate against this as much as possible.   Many schools provide support to AAC reliant students by adding lists of words to their communication pages. Whilst this may be helpful when the student wishes to talk about what they are learning, it is far from adequate in supporting learning outcomes. For this to be possible students need access to the source information that they are learning from, activities that give them practice with the source information and a means to record answers to questions in the same way as their non-disabled peers. We call these three phases of learning input, elaboration, and output. Access to resources in these three phases should be provided in a manner that ensure that the student experiences no disadvantage as compared to the access that their non-disabled peers are entitled to. For this to be possible resources need providing so that the student is required to exert the least possible physical effort in the timeliest manner achievement with maximum independence. This is to ensure that a student’s working memory is not compromised by difficulty with access to learning.     More about the three phases of learning:   The examples in the following section are taken from CandLE’s advanced accredited courses which would be equivalent to the higher levels of a formal curriculum or a mix of key stages 2 and 3.     The input phase: This is the phase where the teaching is provided to the student either through direct teaching instruction or through their own research of a topic. Examples of ways in which students gather information include: • Teacher presentations to one or more students using PowerPoint or other presentation software. • Video presentations. • Internet Research. • Textbooks • Handouts   Any information that a non-disabled student can independently access must also be available for the student who uses AAC to access the same materials on their AAC devices.   Here are some examples of independent access to information: In this example the student can listen to the poem they will be working with as often as they wish to and isolate pieces of text to quote from. This is an example of a teacher presentation adapted for a student to access on their AAC device. This is an example of a video that has been made available to a student on their AAC device. Having the video on their own device means that the student can independently access the source as often as they need in the most accessible way possible. This is an example of an adaptation in a student’s AAC device enabling them to carry out internet research independently. Here is an example of an adaptation of a page from a textbook with the key information provided in small chunks so that each piece of information is easily understood. Here is an example of a handout that has been adapted for the student to access in their AAC device.     The elaboration Phase: This phase of learning is where the student consolidates their understanding by carrying out activities, making predictions, highlighting relevant pieces of text and discussing the topic.   In this example the student is answering a multiple-choice question about a meaning in the poem. In this example the student is highlighting text to answer the question. Following on from highlighting the text the student can use their AAC software to create a quote from the

Read More »
Articles

Working Memory and AAC

Working Memory and AAC (Augmentative and Alternative Communication) Author: Marion Stanton Working memory is the facility we all use to manipulate information to arrive at an answer. An example would be a two-stage mental arithmetic sum such as 10-5+2=7. The student needs to take 5 from 10 but they also need to hold +2 in their working memory to retrieve and answer. Working memory only lasts approximately 15 seconds for any of us, so it is crucial that a student is only expected to have a maximum of 15 seconds thinking time for each question or part of a question they are working on unless they have a way of referring quickly to the information they need or rehearsing the information.    Long-term memory is where we store what we remember without having to think. An example of this is committing the times tables to memory. However, to achieve this a non-disabled student will, for 10×10 multiplication table spend anywhere between 20 hours and 200 hours, spread out over the course of 1 to 5 years of regular “drilling”, which should really be a combination of instant recall, finding shortcuts, and speed training . It is highly likely that this would be a significant challenge for a student who relies on AAC so it could be argued that having a multiplication table to consult or a calculator is a reasonable adjustment for students who rely on AAC. Working memory is compromised by the need to use AAC as it is a much slower process than speech or free writing. It is therefore essential that students who rely on AAC are given ways of working that mitigate against this as much as possible.     Pre-requisites to learning:     It is important that students who rely on AAC have access to textbooks, teacher’s PowerPoints, worksheets, and any other materials that their peers have access to. They need independent means to engage with learning materials so that their learning can develop through repetition with variety, reminders, and practice. Finally, they need a means to record their answers.      This is best achieved using an on-screen keyboard with word-prediction making the learning of literacy essential. However, symbol-based vocabularies and/or answers from multiple choice options may also be appropriate. Multiple choice particularly enables the student to keep up with the pace of the classroom.     The aim is to for the student to achieve maximum independence in the most time effective manner exerting the least physical effort. Once a student’s access is optimised, we can be surprised by how much they can achieve. They key to supporting students who rely on AAC is to ensure that their working memory is optimised.     Examples of adapted work that supports working memory: This has multiple choice to support speed and the question, text and answer choices are all on the same page for easy reference. Here is an example of an ordering exercise with the original text on the same page for easy reference. In this example the student can navigate through the text to isolate their quote without leaving the page. In this example the student’s keyboard has been duplicated so that the question remains in sight as he is typing.   ‘Use visual and verbal information to present information to students – This has nothing to do with the infamous ‘learning styles’, rather empirical research suggests that our working memory has two points of entry (Chandler and Sweller, 1992). One accepts auditory information, whilst the other visual. If the auditory and visual information correspond to one another, then the burden on working memory is far less than using one pathway alone. Image 1 shows the effect of using one pathway to working memory, whereas image 2 shows the use of both. However, please note that if the text and visual information are not clearly integrated, then it could have adverse effects on learning (Chandler and Sweller, 1992).’   The adaptations shown previously all provide both auditory and visual information in an integrated way. The harder the better. The information that a student finds too easy to understand can fail to be sent to long-term memory because it is glossed over by the brain. What we think hard about is what we remember.  We therefore need to be careful about how we repeat what we teach so we don’t encourage shallow learning. For example, for GCSE revision classes, rather than asking students to reread texts, have them work hard at focusing their attention on the essential meanings of the text. Rereading feels familiar and easy, and won’t prove memorable – after all, they have read it already. Rather than teaching in topics or blocks, which feels fluent and natural – but is too easy and too fluent – interleave content. Incorporating gaps into the study of a topic, studying different elements of it at different times and revisiting it in the middle of learning something completely different, forces the brain to do a harder job remembering. This difficulty is what actually makes the knowledge stick. It’s slower to learn this way, for sure, but it lasts longer. Students may not make what Ofsted calls “rapid progress”, but they will remember what they’re studying better by undertaking more difficult and slower, deeper learning. An understanding of memory is not an isolated part of education but something that should underpin all learning, informing what we do and why we do it.’ https://www.ldatschool.ca/introduction-working-memory/  Spaced Learning Cramming facts into learning doesn’t work and neither does associative learning. We need to space practice over time so that learning is repeated just as the association is fading from memory. For example, teach the same concept at intervals of 5 seconds then 25 seconds, 2 minutes, 10 minutes, 1 hour, 1 day, 5 days, 25 days, 4 months etc. This is known as spaced learning and based on the neuroscience of how humans form long-term memory. Permanent neural connections are more likely to be made when a

Read More »
Articles

Introduction to Exams Access for Students who Rely on Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC)

Introduction to Exams Access for Students who Rely on Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) Author: Marion Stanton The single most important criteria for asking exam boards to make reasonable adjustments is the ‘normal way of working’. Schools need to show that the adjustments the students require reflect the way in which they work in lessons as well as during tests, assessments, and exams. In addition, it is important to demonstrate that the student will not be given an unfair advantage through the reasonable adjustments being requested. Conversely, the exam boards must demonstrate that they are not creating an unfair disadvantage through lack of reasonable adjustments. It is the responsibility of the school to make the arguments for the reasonable adjustments when they fall outside the guidance contained in the JQC ‘Access Arrangements, Reasonable Adjustments and Special Consideration. Document:  https://www.jcq.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/09/AA_regs_Revision_One_Sep23_FINAL.pdf In order to support schools around the needs of students who rely on Augmentative and Alternative Communication (AAC) CandLE have been working as part of the AAC Exams Access Working Group and have produced a supplementary guidance which can be accessed here:  https://www.communicationmatters.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2023/11/AAC-Exams-Access-Guidance-2023-2024.pdf  Exam boards are bound by the 2010 Equality Act to make reasonable adjustments ‘where a disabled person would be at a substantial disadvantage in undertaking an assessment.’  GCSE exam boards have made considerable headway in understanding the needs of students who rely on AAC, but other providers of alternatives may not be so experienced in offering the reasonable adjustments required.     1. https://www.jcq.org.uk/exams-office/access-arrangements-and-special-consideration/  

Read More »