Welcome to Day 2 of Speech-A-Palooza! I hope you enjoyed Whitney's post yesterday! Today's post is from Jen Alcorn, author of Crazy Speech World. Themes are something new I am trying this year, too. I had always done the traditional holiday themes, but I am now trying out a new theme every other week. This post will be helpful for any of you that use themes in your therapy sessions... or are thinking about doing it! One of the most popular questions I get is about using themes for therapy. Mostly, how do I plan my themes? I'm sure other people have different methods, but here is how I do it... My therapy themes are simple and straightforward. Over the summer, I sit down with my calendar and map it out. It takes an hour or two, but it ends up making therapy planning incredibly easier. Why? Because you are able to narrow your focus. When I tackled this project the first time, it was a little overwhelming. But the more you do it, the more comfortable you become with the process and it ended up being pretty easy for me this past summer. Something you may find helpful is from Perkilou Products...it is a four week calendar for every month of the year. It gave me ideas when I was first starting to create my own. My own version is a little different. I center my planning around holidays and seasons, some of which I use for two weeks. You can download my version HERE. I also created a blank version, which you can grab HERE. After this part comes the fun stuff...finding materials! Blogs. I think these are the best places to get inspired and find activities. Pinterest. I have seen tons of Pin Boards dedicated to specific holidays, seasons, or themes. You can even search by theme using the search box. Books. Look through your own or go visit the library! You can find a book on any topic, try to find various levels, as well as fiction and non-fiction. Go through your STUFF! Pull your files out and go through your cabinets. I bet you have tons of your own materials that you can use :) I have started organizing my themes by binders to keep up with it all. I bought tons of page protectors to keep all my original worksheets and materials in, and all of my activities for that theme go in the binder. I also make a list of all the manipulatives that I have that go with the theme...like I have jack-o-latern baskets I can use for Halloween or the Popcorn containers with the carnival theme. I just don't want to forget what I have! We always have so much STUFF! I still use my trusty bag of favorites...CandyLand, Apples to Apples, Chipper Chat etc. to fill in the gaps. Not everything I do is related to the theme, but I love having the organization of using themes in therapy. I really believe that it has positively impacted my therapy and I would encourage any SLP to do it!
A blog on Speech and Language topics.
DO YOU LIKE MINIATURES and trinkets? These FUN YEAR-ROUND MATS are the PERFECT COMPANION for working on SPEECH & LANGUAGE goals such as SPATIAL CONCEPTS, VOCABULARY, ARTICULATION, PREPOSITIONS, WH questions, DESCRIBING, and many other targets, while using all your little mini objects, mini erasers, and trinkets! Grab your mini erasers and trinkets, use all those little collectibles and watch your students respond. Make some fun sensory bins using all things mini. Resource includes a variety of year-round and holiday themes in color & black and white mats. Parent Letter included too! Great for BACK TO SCHOOL & ALL YEAR LONG! Super Fun and Super Easy! GREAT FOR SENSORY BIN ACTIVITIES and BARRIER GAMES TOO! ************************************************** HUGE BUNDLE with WH Descriptor Wheels and Visuals for building Speech & Language! CONTENTS: PRODUCT CONTAINS COLOR AND BLACK & WHITE OPTIONS for all the trinket mats. CONTENTS & DIRECTIONS: 1. DESCRIBE ME VISUAL CUES – (p. 11 – 14) Use these as a visual cue while describing trinkets, card decks, vocabulary cards, etc. Color and Black & White. Fade the cues with the second column and the third column. Use a dry erase maker to have students fill in the color version (laminate or slide in a sheet protector). 2. DESCRIBE ME WHEEL, WH QUESTION METER, & CARDS with LITTLE OLD LADY FEEDING MOUTH – (p. 16 – 24) attach little old lady to an old tissue box, cereal box, etc. or attach to the descriptive wheel. If “feeding” her, cut out black mouth area. Feed mini objects and trinkets. Use wheel and meter as visual cues. 3. DESCRIBE ME SENTENCE STRIPS – (p. 25 – 28) 4. I SPY WORKSHEETS – (p. 30 – 49) 5. BLANK WORD LISTS & PARENT LETTER – (p. 51 – 53) 6. VISUAL CUES – (p. 54 – 57) These labels can be used to organize your mini things and trinkets. They can also be used as visual cues. Laminate the mouth/sound pictures , then attach the targeted sound picture to a wooden craft stick with velcro or just hold the picture up when using it as a reminder to cue the student to remember correct placement. 7. COLOR SPEECH & LANGUAGE MATS (all blank)– (p. 59 – 94) Print and laminate. Use these during speech therapy. Color Mats can be used with trinkets, chips, playdough, etc. 8. BLACK & WHITE SPEECH & LANGUAGE MATS (all blank)– (p. 96 – 128) You can have the students color the circles or use daubers. You can write target words or student can draw tiny pictures, use trinkets, etc. 9. SCENES for SILLY SENTENCES/STORIES – (p. 130 – 139) 10. WH Question BOX – (p. 141 – 143) 11. WHERE HOUSE & Gingerbread House and preposition data sheet – (p. 145 – 154) These are suggestions to use during speech and language therapy or as a reinforcer activity, or other classroom activities. You can also use these in other creative ways. And remember HAVE FUN! You can do anything if you have ENTHUSIASM! All the Best, Monae :) Related Products ⭐ 100 PAGES Speech Auditory Bombardment WORKSHEETS color & No Prep black & white ⭐ ARTICULATION FUN BUNDLE PLUS BONUS TURKEY/CHICKEN BOOK AAC SPEEC ⭐ ARTICULATION GIRLS FUN SPEECH THERAPY "L" worksheets ⭐ SPEECH SOUNDS POSTER Speech Therapy WORKSHEETS ⭐ SPEECH THERAPY PHONOLOGY FUN /s/ blends worksheets ⭐ 100 PAGES Speech Sound WORKSHEETS No Prep black & white Monae’s Speech Activities & Craftivities are the perfect tools for working on speech sounds at the word, phrase, and sentence level. They are very engaging, very easy to use, and kids LOVE THEM! Also, check out Monae’s Books & Language Packets for developing and improving receptive and expressive language skills for children with language and/or learning disabilities. Some of the skills these books target are vocabulary development, social skills, and behaviors. *************************************************** Teachers and Speech-Language Pathologists will find using these stories make teaching these skills fun and easy.
Welcome to Day 2 of Speech-A-Palooza! I hope you enjoyed Whitney's post yesterday! Today's post is from Jen Alcorn, author of Crazy Speech World. Themes are something new I am trying this year, too. I had always done the traditional holiday themes, but I am now trying out a new theme every other week. This post will be helpful for any of you that use themes in your therapy sessions... or are thinking about doing it! One of the most popular questions I get is about using themes for therapy. Mostly, how do I plan my themes? I'm sure other people have different methods, but here is how I do it... My therapy themes are simple and straightforward. Over the summer, I sit down with my calendar and map it out. It takes an hour or two, but it ends up making therapy planning incredibly easier. Why? Because you are able to narrow your focus. When I tackled this project the first time, it was a little overwhelming. But the more you do it, the more comfortable you become with the process and it ended up being pretty easy for me this past summer. Something you may find helpful is from Perkilou Products...it is a four week calendar for every month of the year. It gave me ideas when I was first starting to create my own. My own version is a little different. I center my planning around holidays and seasons, some of which I use for two weeks. You can download my version HERE. I also created a blank version, which you can grab HERE. After this part comes the fun stuff...finding materials! Blogs. I think these are the best places to get inspired and find activities. Pinterest. I have seen tons of Pin Boards dedicated to specific holidays, seasons, or themes. You can even search by theme using the search box. Books. Look through your own or go visit the library! You can find a book on any topic, try to find various levels, as well as fiction and non-fiction. Go through your STUFF! Pull your files out and go through your cabinets. I bet you have tons of your own materials that you can use :) I have started organizing my themes by binders to keep up with it all. I bought tons of page protectors to keep all my original worksheets and materials in, and all of my activities for that theme go in the binder. I also make a list of all the manipulatives that I have that go with the theme...like I have jack-o-latern baskets I can use for Halloween or the Popcorn containers with the carnival theme. I just don't want to forget what I have! We always have so much STUFF! I still use my trusty bag of favorites...CandyLand, Apples to Apples, Chipper Chat etc. to fill in the gaps. Not everything I do is related to the theme, but I love having the organization of using themes in therapy. I really believe that it has positively impacted my therapy and I would encourage any SLP to do it!
Early Language Concepts: Speech Therapy Activities with Spring Theme. This packet includes interactive speech therapy activities to encourage the comprehension and use of early pronouns, prepositions, and verbs. This pack combines my best selling activities and has a cute Spring theme! Buyers Say... "My kids love this activity and I love how easy it was to assemble. I have this as a back up activity, but can easily be used for a week's worth of therapy with all the different activities." Megan C "This resource was great to give to parents during this break." Cassie R "AWESOME product! I have used these SOOO much and my kids LOVE it! Thanks!" Michelle R Distance Learning Suitable - all instruction sheets in this packet are written in a manner suitable for providing to parents. They included scripted "You could say..." examples for explaining the activity to your child as well as extension activities with common household items. This makes them the ideal packet to provide to parents if you are being asked to facilitate distance learning at this difficult time. This Verbs, Pronouns and Prepositions pack contains materials for: ★ Pronouns – he / she / they / his / hers / theirs / him / her / them ★ Prepositions – on / under / next to / behind / in front ★ Verbs - Climbing, Standing, Crawling and flying Also contains bonus instructions on using the pack for vocabulary development and following multi-step directions. Bright and engaging concrete activities in full color combined with cost-effective, copy- friendly carryover sheets.
Fun ways to use smash mats. Gumball smash mats are great to use when working on engagement.
This packet of summer and beach themed Basic Concepts Task Cards covers 10 different basic skills your special education students should be practicing every day! Each concept has 2 levels for a total of 200 task cards. Also includes data sheets for tracking IEP goals, sorting mats and student response worksheets. Savings Alert! This is part of a larger yearlong bundle. Check it out here and get all 12 months at a huge discount! These differentiated and themed task cards are perfect for task boxes, independent work stations, direct instruction, morning work and warm-ups! Contents 200 task cards - 10 basic concepts x 2 levels per concept x 10 cards per level Level 1: multiple choice - use clothespins, dot markers, tokens, dry erase markers etc Level 2: expressive complete the sentence Cover and quick data chart for each set Sorting mats for 7 of the concepts (all but colors, shapes and numbers) Student response worksheets - 3 levels Level 1: write the word Level 2: trace the word Level 3: circle the word Two data sheets for tracking IEP goals Concepts included: Colors Numbers to 10 Shapes Same or Different Big or Small In or Out On or Under In front or Behind Right or Left None or Some Please note: This is a digital download. You will download, print, and prep as needed. No physical items will be sent to you.
I'm working on left and right with one of my clients. Here are 24 flash cards that we will pair with a fun game like Pop-Up Pirate! Click here to download!
Brand new to my TpT store, Pronoun Clips! This interactive, and adorable, activity is geared towards Pre-K to 2nd grade students working on pronoun concepts: he, she, him, her, they, and them. The 'pronoun kids' are big! Like a full sheet of paper big! This makes it easy for little hands to grab and are just more fun that a small card. There are 30 action squares that you can glue to clothespins. There are 10 squares for each pair: he/him, she/her, and them/they. The students take a clothespin and clip it to the correct kid. Then they use
Free speech therapy worksheets and activities (articulation, receptive/expressive language) for speech-language pathologists, teachers, parents.
I have been using interactive books like these for years. My ASD team purchased a few of the Pyramid Educational Consultants books back when I started in the ASD realm. I can't even find the books that I have for sale anywhere now. After we started using these, I realized that I wanted to make my own. This was way before I really knew how to create products, and I think I created it in Microsoft Word. For my friends who make products, you will understand that it took a LONG time to create this original product. I have a really hard time formatting anything in Word. It is just hard for me to get things to go where I want them to. Anyway, back to my original books. I made several winter themed books about what we do in winter vs. summer and also what do we wear in winter vs. summer. These books were a big hit, and I used them for years. Fast forward to now...I have so many students who are struggling with sentence expansion, vocabulary, and answering simple questions. I wanted to update my books (they were looking a little old, tattered, and dated) for use with a variety of my students. The first two that I have made are: Winter Activities and Winter Clothes. Both of these books have already been big hits with my students with ASD (and their teachers) as well as some of my students in Kindergarten and First Grade who are working on some different language skills such as answering questions and expanding utterance length. These books are really easy to put together and use: •Print and laminate all pages. •Cut the top half of the book pages. Leave the last page whole (this is where you will store your interactive pieces. •Hole punch all pages within the black box. I use two holes. Then, place the book pages on top of The last page. Bind the book using book rings. Another option would be to bind the book with a binding machine. •Cut out the interactive pieces. •Place a piece of hook Velcro on each sentence square on each book page, as well as on top of each square picture on the last page. Place a piece of loop Velcro on the back of each interactive piece. Store these pieces on the last page. •Students will read the book, and move the interactive pieces to the sentence box for each page. You can find these books at my TpT store HERE. There will be more to come! I already have my summer ones completed, just haven't totally tested them out yet. I'll keep you updated as more of these come out. ***Updated Winter 2015!!! I have added an additional book to this set. What Do You See? is the latest book. My students did really well using the spring, summer, and fall versions of this, so I went back and added the What Do You See? for winter. Hopefully you and your students enjoy these as much as we have!
"In the Tall, Tall Grass" by Denise Fleming is one of my favorite spring books for speech therapy in preschool. You might think that with a caseload of all preschool, lesson planning is pretty easy!
As you can tell, I have pulled out all of my Halloween themed materials! I love this holiday and incorporating it into my therapy sessions. My students are motivated by it which is enough reason for me! One group I work with is working on wh- questions so I created my popular wh- board game with a Halloween th ...
I'm on vacation, and am full of little blogging ideas---geocaching adventures, new grandbaby pictures, the assault on education by the North Carolina General Assembly. I'm saving all of that for later. Instead, I'm thinking about all of my speech and special education buddies who are returning to work (without instructional money for the most part). Rather than spend your meager salaries on TPT materials, here's something for free. This bingo game is good for simple vocabulary, game playing, and prepositions. The kids also have to talk in sentences. Click here for the game in Boardmaker Click here for the game in pdf
This post contains Amazon Affiliate links. Every new class of preschool students brings new vocabulary that we need to teach, and this year I have had a lot of kids who are working on identifying and labeling body parts. I have been trying to find many different ways to incorporate these goals into various kinds of activities to engage my friends with the short attention spans :) SO, I'm bringing you a list of some of my favorite activities and games that have helped me to accomplish these goals...hello, mastery!
Explore Obseussed's 167 photos on Flickr!
What happens before breakfast? After lunch? Help your preschooler sort out the concept of before and after with this matching worksheet.
Spatial or positional concepts are so hard for my clients with autism. Here they are just drawing a dot, but it's more motivating to think of that dot as a booger, wart, or bug... especially for my sweet little boys! Click here to download the positional directions worksheet!
Engaging autistic students is all about recognizing their strengths and interests. Amanda provides 14 creative activity ideas to build language and meaningful communication.
Children love "I Have, Who Has" card games, and you can find many of them online to teach a variety of skills. You can find my "I Have, Who Has" games for
I love ALMOST everything about the beginning of the year, but what I don't like is teaching social skills. I would consider this to be my we...
Seek out all the things that start with S sounds in this picture. This is a sensational way for preschoolers to learn concepts they'll need for kindergarten!
Item description This packet contains a portable visual communication tool for students with autism, MLL, ESOL, EFL using picture symbols and visual cues. Covering 25 different communication category topics are provided each coming in 3 different sizes (8 square, 6 square and 4 square) totaling 75 communication cards. The different sizes of communication cards within this product are provided to not only aid in the portability of the cards (larger cards on a lanyard, smaller on a wristlet etc) but also to assist students who have deficits in scanning large arrays. Each communication card has its own color to help the student to easily discriminate between the different cards and to help them find the desired board/communicative card and visual quickly and efficiently. The different communication cards (by category) are as follows: -Food -Toys -Clothes -Places -Drinks -Breakfast -Snacks -I feel… -Dinner -Lunch -School things -School places -School people -Utensils -I want… -Family/friends -Home -Actions -Dessert -Want to watch -It hurts -Games/activities -How many? -It is too….. (hot, cold etc) -School actions (help me . . .) With each topic/category, multiple communication visuals are provided.
These free community helper sort and classify mats are so much fun for kids learning about people who help us! These mats come in two styles, blank mats
Some of the links on this site are affiliate links. This means if you click on a link and purchase something, I'll receive a small affiliate commission at no cost to you. Thanks so much for supporting my efforts with this blog! My bloggy pal Hilary over at Raising Fairies and Knights started a fun new Monthly Crafting Book Club this year - a challenge to create activities to go along with some of the most beloved children's books. We're halfway through the year and so far, have really had some great fun: January - Animal Action Dice Game for the book Barnyard Dance. February - Cause & Effect Box for If You Give a Moose a Muffin. March - an alphabetical scavenger hunt for Dr. Seuss's ABC. April - handwashing fun to go along with The Piggy in the Puddle. May - 5 Little Monkeys Fold 'Em Up for Five Little Monkeys Jumping on the Bed. June - pinecone princess & Cozy Sweater Warrior Paper Dolls for The Princess and the Pony. July - lantern craft for Curious George Goes Camping. Now it's August, and we all chose a different back-to-school themed book to focus on. I have quite the stack of great school-themed titles from my classroom, so I pulled them all out and had Gv choose her favorite. She immediately reached for Froggy Goes to School - that silly frog never fails to get her giggling, so I had already suspected it would be a major contender. We started reading the book, but after just a few pages, Gv ran off to grab this one to add to our pile: Froggy's first-day-of-school dream had reminded Gv of all his crazy clothing antics in Froggy Gets Dressed, so we went ahead and worked in a little activity to go along with that title, too. For the book Froggy Goes to School, we decided to make a cute little backpack for Gv's stuffed frog and then fill it full with school supplies. I printed out this freebie onto cardstock, then Gv drew her design and cut out all the pieces. She and I worked together to glue all the pieces on. (The mini-backpack, while the perfect size for our frog, did not fit the paper bags we had. We just glued this smaller backpack together on itself for her frog to wear and then made the larger-sized backpack to go with our paper bag. One of Gv's babies got to wear that one.) Finally, Gv went on a school-supply scavenger hunt around the house to find things to fill this backpack with. After all that crafty fun, we turned to our second Froggy book. I read it to Gv and then asked her to go find all the clothing items he wore during the story. Then, she grabbed a little friend and dressed her all up - remembering to put on the underwear first! {wink} Gv had so much fun with this, she repeated the activity three times throughout the day! I love coming up with book connections like this, how about you? I'd love to hear! Either leave a comment below or email me at lisahealy (at) outlook (dot) com. Also, if you don't want to miss a single minute of great tips like this and all the fun around here, be sure to sign up for free updates and then look forward to having each post delivered right to your inbox. Click here to find great craft ideas for other back-to-school books! Linked up with: Just Another Linky, Favorite Things, Over the Moon, Share the Wealth Sunday, Dishing it & Digging it, Social Butterfly Sunday,What's for Dinner?, Family Joy Blog Link-Up, Literacy Musings Monday, Practical Mondays, Homeschool Nook Link Up, Happiness is Homemade, Mom to Mom Mondays, Merry Monday, Motivation Monday, Thoughtful Spot, What'd You Do This Weekend, Everything Kids, Meet Up Monday, Totally Terrific Tuesday, Tasty Tuesdays, Little Learning Link Up, Two Uses Tuesday, Hip Homeschool Hop, Lou Lou Girls Fabulous Party Tell it to Me Tuesday, Tuesday Talk, Wonderful Wednesday, A Little Bird Told Me, WFMW, Everything Early Childhood, The Mommy Club, Creative Muster, Party in Your PJs,What to Read,I Am Pinnable, Christian Bloggers Link Up, This Is How We Roll, Creative Ways, Hearts for Home, Creative Exchange, 100 Happy Days, Learn & Play Link Up, Shine Blog Hop, Try It Like It, No Rules Weekend Blog Party, Booknificent Thursdays, On the Edge of the Week, Thursday Favorite Things, Cozy Reading Spot, Party at My Place, I'm Lovin' It, Inspiration Spotlight, Home Matters, Pretty Pintastic Party, Weekend Potluck, Awesome Life Friday, Creative Collection, The Beautifully Creative Inspired , Bloggers Pit Stop, Weekend Traffic Jam, Pin Me Party, From the Archives, Family Fun Friday, Friday Frivolity, Bloggers Spotlight, Make My Saturday Sweet, Weekend Wind-Down Party,Friday Features Linky, Funtastic Friday , The Pinterest Game, Best of the Weekend
One of my favorite ways to stay organized and help students use carryover skills is to use themes in therapy! When I was in the schools, I always got a copy of my teachers' lesson plans and incorporated their themes, vocabulary, target letters, etc. into my therapy sessions. This way the kids were getting extra exposure to the material they were learning about in their classrooms but scaffolded down to their level and altered to reach their goals. Confession time: I have anxiety. I am sure that I am not the only SLP that has it- in fact I know I am not. Keeping myself organized and having clear plans for what my week ahead will look like, helps me get more sleep at night. I like to use a calendar sheet to keep my themes organized. When I get my students' classroom theme list, I transfer them to this sheet and keep it in my student binder. Since I am a private therapist now, I keep one of these for each of my students. I use the Sunday section to name the theme and sometimes make a list of materials I need to pick up for the week. You can download a copy of this calendar for free in my Teachers Pay Teachers store. Click on the calendar image above to download your copy :) PS- If you download this, I would LOVE to see a picture of how you use it on Instagram! Tag me in it @simply_speech Happy Friday, have a great weekend!
DO YOU LIKE MINIATURES and trinkets? These FUN YEAR-ROUND MATS are the PERFECT COMPANION for working on SPEECH & LANGUAGE goals such as SPATIAL CONCEPTS, VOCABULARY, ARTICULATION, PREPOSITIONS, WH questions, DESCRIBING, and many other targets, while using all your little mini objects, mini erasers, and trinkets! Grab your mini erasers and trinkets, use all those little collectibles and watch your students respond. Make some fun sensory bins using all things mini. Resource includes a variety of year-round and holiday themes in color & black and white mats. Parent Letter included too! Great for BACK TO SCHOOL & ALL YEAR LONG! Super Fun and Super Easy! GREAT FOR SENSORY BIN ACTIVITIES and BARRIER GAMES TOO! ************************************************** HUGE BUNDLE with WH Descriptor Wheels and Visuals for building Speech & Language! CONTENTS: PRODUCT CONTAINS COLOR AND BLACK & WHITE OPTIONS for all the trinket mats. CONTENTS & DIRECTIONS: 1. DESCRIBE ME VISUAL CUES – (p. 11 – 14) Use these as a visual cue while describing trinkets, card decks, vocabulary cards, etc. Color and Black & White. Fade the cues with the second column and the third column. Use a dry erase maker to have students fill in the color version (laminate or slide in a sheet protector). 2. DESCRIBE ME WHEEL, WH QUESTION METER, & CARDS with LITTLE OLD LADY FEEDING MOUTH – (p. 16 – 24) attach little old lady to an old tissue box, cereal box, etc. or attach to the descriptive wheel. If “feeding” her, cut out black mouth area. Feed mini objects and trinkets. Use wheel and meter as visual cues. 3. DESCRIBE ME SENTENCE STRIPS – (p. 25 – 28) 4. I SPY WORKSHEETS – (p. 30 – 49) 5. BLANK WORD LISTS & PARENT LETTER – (p. 51 – 53) 6. VISUAL CUES – (p. 54 – 57) These labels can be used to organize your mini things and trinkets. They can also be used as visual cues. Laminate the mouth/sound pictures , then attach the targeted sound picture to a wooden craft stick with velcro or just hold the picture up when using it as a reminder to cue the student to remember correct placement. 7. COLOR SPEECH & LANGUAGE MATS (all blank)– (p. 59 – 94) Print and laminate. Use these during speech therapy. Color Mats can be used with trinkets, chips, playdough, etc. 8. BLACK & WHITE SPEECH & LANGUAGE MATS (all blank)– (p. 96 – 128) You can have the students color the circles or use daubers. You can write target words or student can draw tiny pictures, use trinkets, etc. 9. SCENES for SILLY SENTENCES/STORIES – (p. 130 – 139) 10. WH Question BOX – (p. 141 – 143) 11. WHERE HOUSE & Gingerbread House and preposition data sheet – (p. 145 – 154) These are suggestions to use during speech and language therapy or as a reinforcer activity, or other classroom activities. You can also use these in other creative ways. And remember HAVE FUN! You can do anything if you have ENTHUSIASM! All the Best, Monae :) Related Products ⭐ 100 PAGES Speech Auditory Bombardment WORKSHEETS color & No Prep black & white ⭐ ARTICULATION FUN BUNDLE PLUS BONUS TURKEY/CHICKEN BOOK AAC SPEEC ⭐ ARTICULATION GIRLS FUN SPEECH THERAPY "L" worksheets ⭐ SPEECH SOUNDS POSTER Speech Therapy WORKSHEETS ⭐ SPEECH THERAPY PHONOLOGY FUN /s/ blends worksheets ⭐ 100 PAGES Speech Sound WORKSHEETS No Prep black & white Monae’s Speech Activities & Craftivities are the perfect tools for working on speech sounds at the word, phrase, and sentence level. They are very engaging, very easy to use, and kids LOVE THEM! Also, check out Monae’s Books & Language Packets for developing and improving receptive and expressive language skills for children with language and/or learning disabilities. Some of the skills these books target are vocabulary development, social skills, and behaviors. *************************************************** Teachers and Speech-Language Pathologists will find using these stories make teaching these skills fun and easy.
From Head to Toe by Eric Carle is a big favorite around our house. Sometimes we read it no less than five times in one sitting and act out e...
These free community helper sort and classify mats are so much fun for kids learning about people who help us! These mats come in two styles, blank mats
Resources, tips, and materials to help you, help children with autism
Do you need a quick hook to grab the attention of your students? Are you introducing a new theme, topic, or skill? Mystery Bags are a ...
Prior to the holidays, I wanted share my Christmas Bingo game. Lots of you have liked similar activities, so maybe you will like this with ...
Today we launch a new series, PrAACtical Teaching in an ASD Classroom, which will address the nuts and bolts of infusing AAC throughout the school day. I couldn’t be more delighted to introdu…
My house has ants and usually in July, they start to gang up and invade on, under, beside, in, and through things. It becomes a daily battle and I usually win, glad to say! When I ask kids about their homes, they have moms that battle the critters too! I'm sure many of the children here will identify with this book. screenshot of book on boardmaker Ants on the sandwich! I've included a screenshot above. The title page is at the bottom left, and the last page of the book is the picture of the anteater. The bottom right are the icons and sentence strip. Concepts targeted here are ON and UNDER. Enjoy the book, and I hope your houses don't have ants everywhere! Click here for a Boardmaker version of Ants Everywhere! Click here for a pdf version of Ants Everywhere!
Winter Themed Speech Therapy Activities Value Bundle Included in this packet is everything you need for Winter in your Speech Room in one SUPER value bundle! This packet contains all of my Winter-themed printable activities and games. Buying all the packets together in this pack gives you a 20% discount! Create activities for centers or print and go worksheets for distance learning and homework packets!
Don’t spend all of your therapy time quizzing kids on concepts. Make sure you take the time to teach them the skills that they need first in order to understand these concepts. Do your students