<img height="1" width="1" style="display:none" src="https://www.facebook.com/tr?id=412613405606678&amp;ev=PageView&amp;noscript=1">

    Importance of Categorization

    Topics: About Autism, Teaching with Pictures, Infant/Toddler (0-3), Elementary (4-12), Articles

    Importance of Categorization
    woman-and-girl-using-language-cards

    Learning to categorize items is a basic task for young children. Close your eyes for a moment and picture a typical pre-school classroom: children are sorting little plastic bears, red bears in one tub, blue in another, and green in a third; another group of children arranges pictures into different piles of animals, vehicles, and foods; and still a third group is reading a book about animals that live in the sea vs. animals that can fly! We instinctively know it is important to sort things into categories… but do we know why?

    4-categories-of-cards-animals-clothing-food-and-vehiclesOne important reason to put things into mental categories is to improve memory. In memory research, there is an important strategy known as clustering. If we need to remember a long list of items to purchase at the grocery store (and for some unknown reason we don’t just write them down!), we may have a very tough time remembering the list: chicken,bagels, milk, eggs, cheese, bread, bacon, broccoli, carrots, hot dogs, peas,yogurt, crackers, cereal, corn, and butter. But it would be quite a bit easier if we realized that our list contained 4 proteins (chicken, eggs, bacon and hot dogs), 4 grains (bagels, bread, crackers and cereal), 4 dairy products (milk, cheese, yogurt, and butter), and 4 vegetables (broccoli, carrots, peas, and corn).

    How does the importance of categorization apply to teaching children with autism? As your child adds vocabulary words to their language repertoire, knowing which category a word belongs to may actually improve their retention of the words! For some ideas on how to teach categories, take a look at the downloadable activities guide for our U-Play Mat and our Language Builder Picture Cards!

    You can start working with our Language Builder Cards by downloading 20 FREE cards here:

    Download Language Builder Cards

    Angela Nelson, J.D., Ed.M.

    Written by Angela Nelson, J.D., Ed.M.

    Angela Nelson is the creator of the widely-recognized Language Builder Picture Card Series, and the creator and lead author for the Language Builder ARIS curriculum. Angela received her BA and JD from UCLA where she studied and practiced behavior psychology under Dr. Ivar Lovaas, and her Ed.M. at the Harvard Graduate School of Education, with a focus on technology innovation and education. As Founder and CEO of Stages Learning Materials, Angela has created autism, special needs and early childhood curriculum products since 1997. In addition to her duties at Stages, Angela writes for multiple industry publications and is Chair of the Education Market Association.

    LB-Online-2

    Introducing Language Builder Online

    • Unlock learning with over 10,000 picture cards at your fingertips
    • Hundreds of premade lessons, and ability to create limitless lessons
    • Game-changer for teaching language skills to preschoolers and children with autism
     Learn More!