Attach the labels to a folder so that parents/caregivers know what papers need to be "left at home" or sent "right back" to school. *Put the "left at home" on the left pocket of a folder. Put the "right back to school" on the right pocket of a folder.
Example of a daily school to home communication sheet. I also use this as my daily data sheets. Whoever is working with the student, grabs the kid's clipboard with these sheets attached and writes their notes on whichever goal they are working on. At the end of the day, I make a copy of this sheet to send home to the parents and then I transfer the data collected to a Google Form. *This sheet is for students that are not toilet trained or are in early stages of toilet training.
A lesson planner/teacher binder designed by a self-contained special education teacher for self-contained classrooms. All pages are undated so it can be used year after year. All pages are black and white so that you can print on any color paper to make the planner your own. *Cover *Calendar cover page (calendar are included in the bundle product or can be purchased separately) *Daily schedule *Lesson plan template *Class rosters and contact lists (Student contact information, allergies, direc
Example of an antecedent, behavior, consequence data sheet in checklist form for easier data collection *Download the editable version to create a form that works best for your classroom or therapy center
Information sheet for your students to fill out of the first day of school about their favorite things. You can also send this home to have parents fill out.
Example of a daily school to home communication sheet. I also use this as my daily data sheets. Whoever is working with the student, grabs the kid's clipboard with these sheets attached and writes their notes on whichever goal they are working on. At the end of the day, I make a copy of this sheet to send home to the parents and then I transfer the data collected to a Google Form. *This sheet is for students that are toilet trained.
Working with other adults in your classroom that you have to also guide is one of the trickiest parts of being a Special Education teacher. Keep open communication lines helps a ton! Ask your paras to fill out this survey at the beginning of the year to help you understand how they best communicate and learn will help to start your year off right.
Do you have report billing for Medicaid self-care services? This chart will help you keep organized with the time student arrived, time dismissed, and any time away from you during the day at special services (or whatever you are supposed to count as time away for your district)? This chart is especially helpful at the beginning of the year before all of you online reporting is set up but you still need to make note of these times to enter them later.
Labels to request spare clothes be sent to school *Cut out both labels. Tape the larger spare clothes label to a 2 gallon bag and send home. Tape the small spare shoes bag to a gallon bag and send home.
Do you assign colors to each student in your classroom to help with classroom management? When you are home working on projects for your class do you forget what colors you have assigned to each kid? Hey, we're human. Add this sheet to your Exceptional Teacher Planner/Binder so that you can have that information at your fingertips.
Information sheets to send home to your parents at the beginning of the school year to get to know more about your student *Most questions are also translated in Spanish