Hi Toneworks and friends!
This month we have hosted Toneworks Arts camp, in addition to providing music for Camp Wahode, a day camp hosted by the Autism Society of Minnesota. One my favorite interventions this month has been A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea. It is a great sequencing song that is flexible, so we could incorporate song, movement, and drawing into one. It can be individual or group based which is perfect for camp season! A Hole in the Bottom of the sea is a fun way to address working memory goals, choice making, turn taking, fine motor skills, animal identification, and reading skills. I have included two versions below that show the flexibility of this fun intervention.
Intervention #1: A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea
Description: This version is ideal for young readers working on academic skills like animal identification, sequencing, counting, and colors.
Materials:
A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea book.
There is a great Barefoot book by Jessica Law and Jill McDonald you can use for this intervention but you can also easily write your own with a little paper and some staples. (Look for a future post about a fun home-made book intervention!)
Instructions:
** Instead of actions you can also use finger puppets like the ones in the picture and ask your child to pick out each animal from a bag as you sing about it.
Lyrics:
There’s a hole in the bottom of the sea
There’s a hole in the bottom of the sea
There’s a hole, there’s a hole
There’s a hole in the bottom of the sea
There’s a ____________(new animal) in the hole in the bottom of the sea.
There’s a ____________(new animal) in the hole in the bottom of the sea.
There’s a ____________(new animal), there’s a ____________(new animal)
There’s a ____________(new animal) in the hole in the bottom of the sea.
(Add as many animals as you want, or can remember!)
Link: A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea Song
Intervention #2: A Hole in the Bottom of the Sea Mural
Description: This version is ideal for students working on choice making, “I want” statements, following directions and turn taking. You can easily turn this into a homemade book by using individual pages with lyrics written on, then stapling them together at the end.
Materials:
Large sheet of paper (if a big group think wall sized)
Tape
Markers, crayons, or colored pencils
Instructions: