TPT
Total:
$0.00
Preview of Autism Lesson Plan Printables Autism Support & Special Ed. Classrooms (Spring)

Autism Lesson Plan Printables Autism Support & Special Ed. Classrooms (Spring)

Autism Lesson Plan Printables for Autism Support Classrooms and Special Education Support Classrooms. (Language-based lessons for April-May-June.) 53 Pages. (See my Fall, Winter and Summer products if you want lessons for the entire year.) New Cover- Same product. (Updated 2022.) These language lessons are made for students who a have a difficult time processing language and may need short, hands-on lessons with concrete pictures to increase receptive language. Students with developmental delay
Preview of /S/ Sound Articulation Cards – Initial, Medial & Final Positions

/S/ Sound Articulation Cards – Initial, Medial & Final Positions

Created by
Reece Burkart
Help your students build accurate /s/ sound production with this comprehensive set of articulation cards targeting initial, medial, and final word positions! This engaging speech therapy resource is designed to support articulation practice, improve carryover, and increase confidence during communication tasks. With clear visuals and carefully selected target words, these cards are perfect for speech-language pathologists, special educators, classroom teachers, and home practice. What’s Include
Preview of Fluency Bunnies

Fluency Bunnies

Created by
Tara Put
This is a visual I created last year to work on fluency goals with kindergarten-aged children who stutter. I found it to be useful when describing "smooth speech" (vs. repetitions or blocks) to children who stutter and for increasing their awareness of fluency in conversation.
Preview of Recalling Sentences - ALL varieties from the CELF-5

Recalling Sentences - ALL varieties from the CELF-5

Created by
The Digging SLP
I used to think working on Recalling Sentences was dumb, to be frank. But since taking on this mission to create my own materials for all subtests of the CELF-5, I began using manipulatives (one per word) while giving students words to recall/repeat. And they're growing! (I know, I was shocked) I use errors as opportunities to address phonological-based grammar errors (e.g., She live in the jungle vs. She live s in the jungle). Guys, I even made a goal for it, and I swear this kid's grammar is
Showing 1-4 of 4+ results