This is a year-long bulletin board design. You can change the hashtags throughout the year. For example, you can change them each month, for each thematic unit, display student work, etc.
I print real photos. My students really love looking at them! They can be great conversation starters and writing prompts. The possibilities are endless.
Enjoy :)
I worked at a camp over the summer. I liked to keep parents informed by sending a newsletter home each week. This could easily be used in the classroom setting, as well.
Fonts I used:
Titles: KG What the Teacher Wants
Week and Date: KG True Colors
Info: Century Gothic
This can be used in the inclusion setting or within a special education classroom. It goes through the steps of the scientific method. It allows students with disabilities to participate and share ideas. The last page provides a self-assessment that students can circle yes of no.
This has so many uses! You could use it with cooking activities, science, increase speech, visual support for writing, etc. I needed to have something that could be used in the inclusive setting to be used more than once. It increased the participation for my students in labs!! You just need to laminate and add rings or place in a binder. Individual pages can be hung up for students to refer back to. Students can point or circle on the sheet. They can use the sentence starter to write or have
We send this letter every year to our local grocery store. They provide a donation of fried chicken for our Friendsgiving event. We happen to go grocery shopping there each week. You can edit the letter to fit your needs.
This is a great product to start your year off right!
As a special education teacher, I know that communication is crucial! I was trying to find a way to keep it in one place that allows the entire teaching team, parents, and students to share information. Choose the pages you wish to use and put them together in a binder or plastic spiral book. I provided two versions within this document: You can have the student carry it with them to their different classes. You can type the information dire
This is a great resource to use with students with moderate to severe needs. It is very minimal. I used this with a student who had a goal to count coins using Touch Points. You can put it in Google Slides using Google classroom. It can be done on an iPad or computer. Students are able to click and drag the answer into the yellow box. This provides data collection with ten trials.
I work with students with significant disabilities. One student, in particular, needed a plethora of activities to do that were a the level of a preschooler. I created this document that provided the name, steps, and materials for each activity. They are simple to do in the classroom or hallway. The directives that are listed are simple.
The document is editable so you can add new activities and personalize it to meet your student's needs.
It came in handy to show exactly what my other staff
If you are looking to increase your students' ability to participate in the school setting, use this unit to teach commonly used materials in the school setting! This resource includes: - data sheet - 30 word flashcards - 30 picture flashcards - Task cards for picture match - Two levels of matching pages (picture match and word-word match)
This item is for classroom decor. I glued my letters onto black paper and laminated them. Then, I used a hot glue gun to attach the letters onto a ribbon. You can also hang it as a banner. It is something that can be hanging all year.
The font I used is Wish I Were Taller.
Enjoy :)
It is crucial to stay organized, especially meeting due dates. You can organize this by name, IEP due date, or ETR due date. Personally, I like to go by the IEP due date and then I highlight upcoming ETRs. That way, I can reach out the school psychologist in advance.
PreK - 12th
School Psychology
FREE
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