Are you running social skills groups with middle and high school students?
Yes? This blog post is for you if you are looking for a calendar and/or template to use for each session. If you are looking for more specific lesson plans, check out the free lesson plans in my TPT store!!
It can be tough to structure and run these groups. I always feel like I’m walking a fine line between being overly structured (and not representing a “real” or “spontaneous” communication interaction), and not being structured enough. Without structure, groups can get unruly depending upon the members of the group. It’s like either no-one talks or some members talk too much and take over the group. I tend to run social skills group more on the structured end, until I feel the students have mastered the skills and/or follow the rules of the group. If you struggle with running social skills groups with older students, here’s a template to consider for your speech therapy social communication sessions.
1. Begin your social skills groups with a greeting:
- “Selam” in turkish,
- “Hola” in spanish,
- “Salut” in french, and
- “Goedendag” in dutch.
2. Icebreaker:
3. Teach the skill(s):
- Initiating a conversation,
- Joining a conversation,
- Maintaining a conversation with questions and comments,
- Personal Space,
- Accepting feedback,
- Working collaboratively within a group/resolving conflicts,
- Giving and accepting compliments,
- How to change a topic,
- Social Inferencing,
- Understanding nonverbal Communication Skills (body language, tone of voice, facial expressions),
- Small Talk,
- Formal and informal communication,
- Meaningful conversations,
- Polite Lies
- Topic appropriateness,
- Oversharing,
- Social rules by community setting,
- Perspective-taking,
- Say it or think it?
- How to gracefully lose a game,
- Assertive communication,
- Flexible thinking,
- Detecting sarcasm,
- Emotional tone of voice,
4. Practice the Skill(s):
5. Summarize the social skills session:
Summarize what you did during the session or have a student give a summary statement. This is a good time to give students homework or ideas of how they can continue to practice the skills adressed during the session.
6. End with an upbeat good-bye:
Have students say good-bye to eachother, again by name! Incorporate some good-byes using other languages here too!
“Arrivederci” in italian,
“Adios” in spanish,
- “Chop, chop lollipop,”
- “I gotta bounce,”
- “Happy trails,”
- “Love, peace and chicken grease,”
- “As you wish, jellyfish,” and
- “Take care polar bear.”
Arrivederchi my friends!
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