Three worksheets, with 10 sentences each, for your student to practice grammaticality judgement and sentence correction. The answer key provides the teacher/clinician with the type of error in each sentence to easily select targeted skills.
A visual to assist students with producing complete sentences containing singular and plural pronouns, auxiliary verb, blanks for practice, and verb endings.
This simple language screening will help assess your students' language skills. The screening looks at a variety of skills including antonyms, synonyms, categories, answering general knowledge wh- questions, answering wh- questions about short paragraphs, answering inferential questions, following simple and complex directions, spatial concepts, quantitative concepts, comparatives/superlatives, narratives, and grammar.
This calendar is filled with fun receptive and expressive language activities that your students will love doing as they practice their language skills over the summer. Includes 3 calendars: June, July, and August. The calendars are not year specific, so you can use them year after year. It also includes a cover letter to parents with instructions.
A presentation to teach students how to divide words into syllables. It includes the 6 syllable types and a step-by-step process to decode multi-syllable words.
Your students can practice discriminating short and long "i" vowel sounds with this fun activity by reading the words and matching them to the vowel sound in the word. They can enjoy this activity in one of two ways. First, let your students cut out the petals and glue them on the stem that matches its sound. Or- cut and laminate the petals and stems. Add Velcro and it becomes a fun center/station activity they can enjoy again and again. Blank spaces are provided so you can add new words or edit
These 12 pictures and matching sentences differ by only one grammatical marker such as noun or adjective. Your students can select which picture you are describing or play a matching game. Great for auditory attention and sentence comprehension.
This resource contains 3 of my favorite ways to collect data. All 3 include an example followed by the blank data log. I have left this in word format so you can edit them to your needs and preferences or simply print them as is.
1- The fist data collection system is my new favorite way to collect data. I type my students/groups and session times for each day at the beginning of the week and print it. From there, I can either take data right on the page or just have a 2x2 sticky note on the ta
Your students can practice discriminating short and long "u" vowel sounds with this fun activity by reading the words and matching them to the vowel sound in the word. They can enjoy this activity in one of two ways. First, let your students cut out the petals and glue them on the stem that matches its sound. Or- cut and laminate the petals and stems. Add Velcro and it becomes a fun center/station activity they can enjoy again and again. Blank spaces are provided so you can add new words or edit
Your students can practice discriminating short and long "a" vowel sounds with this fun activity by reading the words and matching them to the vowel sound in the word. They can enjoy this activity in one of two ways. First, let your students cut out the petals and glue them on the stem that matches its sound. Or- cut and laminate the petals and stems. Add Velcro and it becomes a fun center/station activity they can enjoy again and again. Blank spaces are provided so you can add new words or edit
Your students can practice discriminating short and long "a, e, i, o, and u" vowel sounds with this fun activity by reading the words and matching them to the vowel sound in the word. They can enjoy this activity in one of two ways. First, let your students cut out the petals and glue them on the stem that matches its sound. Or- cut and laminate the petals and stems. Add Velcro and it becomes a fun center/station activity they can enjoy again and again. Blank spaces are provided so you can add n
With this book, students can practice the irregular past tense forms of verbs. Simply cut and fold the third column to form a flap and hole punch the pages into a book. From there the students can personalize the words with their own pictures, fold the flaps over the past tense column and the students are ready to quiz themselves. The book contains 5 pages with 10 words on each page, for a total of 50 of the most common irregular past tense verbs.
Your students can practice discriminating short and long "o" vowel sounds with this fun activity by reading the words and matching them to the vowel sound in the word. They can enjoy this activity in one of two ways. First, let your students cut out the petals and glue them on the stem that matches its sound. Or- cut and laminate the petals and stems. Add Velcro and it becomes a fun center/station activity they can enjoy again and again. Blank spaces are provided so you can add new words or edit
Your students can practice discriminating short and long "e" vowel sounds with this fun activity by reading the words and matching them to the vowel sound in the word. They can enjoy this activity in one of two ways. First, let your students cut out the petals and glue them on the stem that matches its sound. Or- cut and laminate the petals and stems. Add Velcro and it becomes a fun center/station activity they can enjoy again and again. Blank spaces are provided so you can add new words or edit
Your students will learn about common idioms with this fun activity. With these 20 cards, your students will read a situation containing an idiom. They can collect brick cards by identifying the meaning of each idiom. As the collect the cards they can cut and glue the bricks to construction paper to build houses, castles, and other buildings. As an alternative, you can cut and laminate the bricks. Then add Velcro and let the students attach them to an old shoe box to make 3-D buildings.
This data collection system is ideal to take data on specific students and goals.These editable charts that allow you to take data on date, percentage, and level of cueing allow you to observe progress at a glance. This makes it very easy to do quarterly updates!!
This student resource includes steps to writing a research paper and steps to writing a literary analysis. Both contain picture cues, detailed steps, and helpful tips.
Here is a great visual to help keep your student on task. It will help them initiate and maintain their tasks with less adult support. Try pairing a hand signal or sign language to really help your student develop their executive functioning skills. Just laminate the visual (or slide it in a sheet protector), and then use a dry erase marker to write in the specific task and circle the class that it is for. This will help cue your student's brain to "get ready" for that class.
A quick update of what was worked on in speech-language therapy which includes a suggestion section for how parents/teachers can help. Type up the note quickly or keep a stack in the therapy room.
A fun, student-created mnemonic device to help students remember the steps to long division. It is a mini poster with pictures and an example for each step.
3rd - 4th
Basic Operations, Other (Math)
FREE
Rated 4.68 out of 5, based on 5 reviews
4.7 (5)
Showing 1-20 of 21 results
About the store
Experience
...SLP
Teaching style
...SLP
Awards & shining teacher moments
...SLP
My own education history
...SLP
Additional biographical information
...SLP
TPT is the largest marketplace for PreK-12 resources, powered by a community of educators.