fbpx skip to Main Content
Where Speech-language Pathologists find ideas, activities and materials.
Picture Cards For S Clusters

Picture Cards for S Clusters

  • August 21, 2019

Add these cards to your speech therapy materials and you won't be sorry!  You can use them to work on correcting cluster reductions or simply for practicing /s/.  They make great stimulus cards for drill or to use with games. …

Read More
Practice Grids For K Sound

Practice Grids for K Sound

  • August 7, 2019

Practice grids can be used in many ways. They can help with motivation when you draw stars or put stickers in the boxes and can also help you keep data on the same words over multiple sessions. You can also…

Read More
Has/Have Verb Agreement – Monkey Theme

Has/Have Verb Agreement – Monkey Theme

  • June 10, 2019

With this hands-on therapy activity, your students will practice "has/have" subject-verb agreement with the help of these cute monkeys.  Students first give the monkey or monkeys an item and then say a sentence to describe it, such as, "The monkey has…

Read More
Category Exclusion Picture Cards And Fill-in Sentences

Category Exclusion Picture Cards and Fill-in Sentences

  • May 8, 2019

Welcome to the flip side of categorization...category exclusion! Students need to know more than just what belongs in a category, but what doesn't belong and why. These picture cards and sentence fill-ins are great for working on category exclusion with…

Read More
Game Boards For SH Sound

Game Boards for SH Sound

  • April 28, 2019

These sound-focused game boards feature pictures and words, so they can be used with readers and non-readers alike!  With pirate, martian, and race themes, your students will be engaged and ready to practice their productions of the "sh" sound in…

Read More
Bug Sorting, Comparing & Contrasting

Bug Sorting, Comparing & Contrasting

  • April 22, 2019

This hands-on activity helps students see how various bugs can be both similar and different. After sorting the bugs on the flowers with their attributes, students can then better compare and contrast them in discussions or by filling in Venn…

Read More
Back To Top