![]() You Doodle creates an album in your photos. There are several options for save and export.(Know that I am still working on my technique, so this may not be the perfect bubble outline.) If you want to remove the word, but keep the bubble outline, select “Erase” and carefully remove the letters without disturbing the outline.Note: Somehow the yellow outline got washed out when I took this picture.I suggest outlining in sections, so if you make a mistake and click the undo button, it will only remove a small section.Keep the outline tight around the word, so the shape and salient features of the word can be easily recognized.Use a stylus pen to start working your bubble outline magic.Make sure the glow is set at the same color as the preferred color. It adds a little more oomph to the color. There is also an option to set the glow effect.I like somewhere between 14 and 15, especially when working with a large font size. ![]() Yellow is Henry’s preferred color and the black background allows the yellow to pop. Select the paintbrush option from the main screen.You may need to expand the font box depending on the size of the word. Use the iPad keyboard to type the word.Save the preferred color for the bubble outline to help them see the shape of the word. Do not choose the student’s preferred color. White for black background, black for white background. I like to make the words big, so I have more options with sizing the image later. Heavily stylized fonts are not appropriate for students with CVI. Choose a font that is clean, simple, and allows a bit more air between letters. I like ChalkboardSE-Light because it uses the type of “a” that we normally create when writing. Select the toolbox icon and click on “Text.”.I started by creating a bubble word of “store.” ![]() Later that day, I created a short experience story to build on his contextual knowledge of the concept of store. ![]() Henry and I recently went to Target after his OT appointment. Step-By-Step Guide to Creating Bubble Words in YouDoodleīelow is a step-by-step guide to creating bubble words in YouDoodle and then incorporating them into adapted books and other apps. Learn more about CVI and teaching sight words at. Christine Roman-Lantzy enables children with CVI to interpret the shape and salient features of the word. The bubble word strategy developed by Dr. Currently Henry is able to recognize real photographs of very familiar objects presented on an iPad (backlighting), on a black background (reduce complexity), and using yellow to highlight salient features (Roman-Lantzy).Ĭhildren with CVI often require a whole word approach to learning how to recognize words. Recognizing words is currently beyond his visual processing abilities (he’ll get there as his functional vision improves!), so incorporating bubble words into his daily routine and with highly motivating topics and objects is a way to scaffold this learning. My son, Henry, is not quite ready for bubble words, but I wanted to start incorporating them into his daily routine and adapted books as a way to reduce novelty when he is finally ready to begin learning how to recognize words. As a parent of a son with CVI in Phase II (Roman-Lantzy’s CVI Range), I’ve come to rely on the YouDoodle app to adapt 2D images and create bubble words. ![]()
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