TPT
Total:
$0.00
Communicate By Design Banner

Communicate By Design

Rated 2 out of 5, based on 1 reviews
4 Followers
Washington, United States
About the store
The name says it all. Communicate — because every student has something to say, including the ones using SGDs, eye-gaze systems, and core vocabulary boards to say it. Design — because access doesn't happen by accident. It happens through specially designed instruction, built intentionally for the students whose IEPs demand it. I'm a special education teacher and the mom of an AAC user. I've sat on both sides of the IEP table — as the educator writing the goals and as the parent fighting for them. I build resources for the teams who refuse to let "too complex" be the end of the conversation.
Read more

All resources

Preview of What the Voice Carries | Poetry & Figurative Language | Adapted ELA | SPED 5-7th

What the Voice Carries | Poetry & Figurative Language | Adapted ELA | SPED 5-7th

Figurative language poetry unit for special education grades 6–10. 4 poems, AAC access built in, V1/V2/V3 passages, NFMA framework, Communication Access Packet included. What the Voice Carries — Figurative Language in Poetry A Poetry Reading Unit for Special Education · Grades 5th–7thYour students are ready for real poetry. This unit gives them access to it. What the Voice Carries is a complete figurative language poetry unit built for special education classrooms, grades 5th–7th. Four poems —
Preview of Wonder | Novel Study Adaptive SDI and AAC | SPED Grades 3-8

Wonder | Novel Study Adaptive SDI and AAC | SPED Grades 3-8

Wonder: Character Analysis A Fiction Anchor Text Unit for Special Education · Grades 3–8Character analysis unit for Wonder by R.J. Palacio, special education grades 3–8. SDI fiction unit with AAC communication boards, symbol cards, and built-in partner guidance. This is a complete character analysis unit built for special education classrooms, grades 3–8. Whole book. AAC support is designed in from the first page. The standard does not change — the access layer does. The Central Question: How
Preview of My Friend Isabelle AAC read-aloud companion — special education grades K-1. AAC

My Friend Isabelle AAC read-aloud companion — special education grades K-1. AAC

This AAC read-aloud companion for My Friend Isabelle brings communication access, friendship and celebrating difference activities, and AAC visual supports into your K–1 shared reading block — print and teach, designed for any classroom. My Friend Isabelle AAC read-aloud companion — special education grades K-1. AAC symbol cards, communication boards, partner scripts. Down syndrome friendship difference SPED. Isabelle and Charlie are different in a lot of ways — and that's exactly what makes th
Preview of Emmanuel's Dream | AAC Read-Aloud Companion | Biography + Persistence | SPED 1-2

Emmanuel's Dream | AAC Read-Aloud Companion | Biography + Persistence | SPED 1-2

This AAC read-aloud companion for Emmanuel's Dream brings communication access, biography, and persistence activities, and AAC visual supports into your grades 1–2 special education shared reading block — print and teach, designed for any classroom. Emmanuel Ofosu Yeboah was told his disability would limit him. He biked across Ghana to prove otherwise. This companion brings his story — and full communication access — into your classroom. What's included (23 pages): • Teacher Packet (~12 pp) — I
Preview of All the Way to the Top | AAC Read-Aloud Companion | Disability Rights | SPED K-3

All the Way to the Top | AAC Read-Aloud Companion | Disability Rights | SPED K-3

This AAC read-aloud companion for All the Way to the Top brings communication access, disability rights activities, and AAC visual supports into your K–3 shared reading block — print and teach, designed for any classroom. What's included:Teacher Packet — Quick-start guide, communication access overview, vocabulary preview routine (Say & Show → Check → Connect → Flag), partner script with planned stopping points for all three readings. 23 pages total — Teacher Packet (9 pages) · Student Activit
Preview of I Talk Like a River | AAC Companion | Communication Identity | SPED K-2

I Talk Like a River | AAC Companion | Communication Identity | SPED K-2

This AAC read-aloud companion for I Talk Like a River brings communication access, communication identity activities, and AAC visual supports into your K–2 shared reading block — print and teach, designed for any classroom. Some days words come easy. Some days they don't. This companion meets students exactly where they are — and so does this book. What's included (23 pages): • Teacher Packet (~12 pp) — IRA/Dialogic Reading/ALS frameworks, vocabulary routine with ARASAAC symbols, partner script
Preview of Ian's Walk | AAC Read-Aloud Companion | Character Perspective | SPED K-1

Ian's Walk | AAC Read-Aloud Companion | Character Perspective | SPED K-1

Ian's Walk AAC read aloud, autism sensory picture book companion, special education K-1, adapted reading AAC, character perspective SPED, symbol cards read aloud What's included (23 pages): • Teacher Packet (~12 pp) — IRA/Dialogic Reading/ALS frameworks, vocabulary routine with ARASAAC symbols, partner scripts for all 3 readings, activities answer key, accessibility statement • Teacher Quick Start (~4 pp) — print-and-go: vocab routine + partner scripts + answer key • Student Activities + AAC Ses
Preview of A Friend for Henry | AAC Read-Aloud Companion | Belonging | SPED K-1

A Friend for Henry | AAC Read-Aloud Companion | Belonging | SPED K-1

(FREE) This AAC read-aloud companion for A Friend for Henry brings communication access, belonging activities, and AAC visual supports into your K–1 shared reading block — print-and-teach, designed for any classroom. Some students know exactly what they want to say. They just need the right tools to say it. This read-aloud companion for A Friend for Henry by Jed Alexander brings belonging, character feelings, and AAC access together in one print-and-teach resource — designed for the whole cla
Showing 1-8 of 8 results

About the store

Experience

The name says it all. Communicate — because every student has something to say, including the ones using SGDs, eye-gaze systems, and core vocabulary boards to say it. Design — because access doesn't happen by accident. It happens through specially designed instruction, built intentionally for the students whose IEPs demand it. I'm a special education teacher and the mom of an AAC user. I've sat on both sides of the IEP table — as the educator writing the goals and as the parent fighting for them. I build resources for the teams who refuse to let "too complex" be the end of the conversation.

Teaching style

Every resource in this store starts with the lesson — not the disability, not the device, not the diagnosis. That means reading activities, curriculum access, and participation supports are designed so your AAC user is doing the same lesson as their peers, not a modified version that asks less of them. Specially designed instruction is the frame. Everything else — prompting strategies, communication supports, scaffold structures is built to serve it. Resources here work for students with dyslexia, ADHD, orthopedic impairments, and complex communication needs. They're evidence-based, IEP-aligned, and built to slot into what you're already doing — not replace it. AT without instruction is expensive furniture. SDI without access is just good intentions. These resources exist in the space between those two failures.

My own education history

Two master's degrees, 20 years of building systems that work for people navigating the hardest chapters of their lives, and one kid who taught me more about communication than any credential ever could. MAT, Special Education — Western Governors University. MPA, Nonprofit Management & Development — Portland State University, Hatfield School of Government. The MPA built the infrastructure brain — grant writing, program design, advocacy systems, and organizational leadership for families living with chronic and complex illness. The MAT built the classroom brain — IEP development, specially designed instruction, and the research to back it all up. Together, they make someone who knows how systems are supposed to work and what to do when they don't. Certifications: WA Teaching Certification | Special Education Endorsement (West E) | Praxis — Special Education: Core Knowledge

Additional biographical information

I came to special education through advocacy — a decade leading a nonprofit for families navigating chronic illness, coaching students to find their voice on a debate stage, and raising a child whose access to the world depends on whether the adults around her do their homework. That experience shaped everything I build: resources made by someone who knows what it costs when a team shows up, and what it costs when they don't. I also serve on the OPTN/HRSA Pediatric Transplantation Committee — appointed to represent the intersection of medical complexity, family systems, and advocacy. The same intersection that shows up in every IEP I write and every resource I build.