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Jlp76's Shop

Average Rating4.49
(based on 15 reviews)

I teach young people with social communication difficulties, including autism. I have worked in both primary and secondary mainstream ARCs and also specialist provision and I love my job! I am slowly uploading resources that have worked well so check back every now and again. If there are any resources or activities that you would like to see in my shop, feel free to message me. I love making resources!

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I teach young people with social communication difficulties, including autism. I have worked in both primary and secondary mainstream ARCs and also specialist provision and I love my job! I am slowly uploading resources that have worked well so check back every now and again. If there are any resources or activities that you would like to see in my shop, feel free to message me. I love making resources!
Victorians, SEN / autism
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Victorians, SEN / autism

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These 2 Power Points were designed to accompany a 'Victorian' box, on load from a local museum. The lessons were planned for a group of Y7 students, all with autism - therefore speaking, listening and attention skills were also targeted, together with more general social skills. Students also struggled with theory of mind / speech and language which the describing activity and game sought to target. My young people really enjoyed these lessons and the activities were completed over several weeks. If you are lucky enough to have a local museum which loans topics boxes then that wold be ideal, however the activities would also work if you have your own set of Victorian learning resources.
Positional language: place in line and before / after, teddy themed, KS1, SEN, ASD
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Positional language: place in line and before / after, teddy themed, KS1, SEN, ASD

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Resources used in my ASD specialist provision class last year, this was a mixed age and ability class who found positional language very difficult to master, even with lots of practical lessons! The pictures used are coloured teddies as we had teddy counters in class. I’ve chosen the colours to match the counter colours so we could use physical teddies for children who needed a more concrete experience. Teddy before / after - 3 A4 sheets. Two of these sheets have a line of teddies at the top, with an arrow to show the direction that they have lined up in. Children need to answer ‘before’ questions (e.g. ‘who is before orange teddy?’) As most of the children had limited literacy skills, I included a strip of teddies at the bottom of the sheet so they could cut and stick instead. This allowed for more independence. The 3rd sheet was an extension for my more able children. Children had to use ‘before’ or ‘after’ correctly in sentences about the teddies. Position Teddy - 5 A4 sheets. Sheet 1: 3 lines of coloured teddies Sheet 2: simple tables Children are given one of the 3 teddy strips which they use to complete the table on sheet 2. Sheet 3: black and white teddy strips to colour Sheet 4 and 5: directions strips Children are given a black and white strip and a sheet of directions (e.g. ‘Red teddy is 1st’ so the child colours the first teddy in their strip red) I chopped and laminated these where appropriate (the teddy strips and instructions) so they were reuseable. They can also be left as they are and glued into books. Together with some practical work, these activities covered maths lessons for over a week. If laminated, they are also good to come back to as one off refreshers, or for 1:1 or intervention work.
EYFS / KS1 / SEN Teddy bear pattern strips, pattern activity
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EYFS / KS1 / SEN Teddy bear pattern strips, pattern activity

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I made these as a re-useable task while we were learning about pattern. I chopped and laminated the strips, put those of the same colour together and made a hole with a holepunch in the end with the larger amount of white. I used a keyring ring to keep the strips together. There are 3 different degrees of differentiation and the strips are colour coded. Children use teddy shaped counters to finish the pattern.
Yes / No questions, reading comprehension, reasoning, TEACCH / workstation task. KS1 / Autism / SEN
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Yes / No questions, reading comprehension, reasoning, TEACCH / workstation task. KS1 / Autism / SEN

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I used these as a TEACCH workstation task in my autism classroom to support my learners reading skills and comprehension, together with their reasoning skills. Cards include topics such as facts, pronouns and prepositions. Learners identify yes or no by attaching a clothes peg to the correct answer. Alternatively, if laminated using gloss laminating pouches, they could circle the correct answer with a whiteboard marker.
Christmas Interactive Book, ASD, S&L, SEN, KS1, Colourful Semantics
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Christmas Interactive Book, ASD, S&L, SEN, KS1, Colourful Semantics

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An interactive book I designed for pupils with ASD but also suitable for learners with Speech and Language Difficulties, SEN or KS1. Colourful Semantics support understanding of who / doing / what questions and also supports understanding of sentence structure. I make up the book by laminating whole pages. I then print off an additional copy of the who / doing / what pages, then chop and laminate these as individual cards. I add velcro to the whole page who / doing / what sheets and use these as a baseboard for the individual cards. I also add velcro to the who / doing / what table underneath each picture. The book can be assembled with a keyring / treasury tag. Keep the who / doing / what sheets separate so the child has them to refer to when looking at the picture. It’s simpler than I’m making it sound! I have used this type of book both as a one to one task and as an independent TEACCH task.
Y3 length, designed to coordinate with White Rose
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Y3 length, designed to coordinate with White Rose

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8 A4 pages with differentiation. Meters and centimeters - converting each way, comparing. Centimeters and millimeters - converting between, comparing, ordering Table: measure classroom items and record results in millimeters and centimeters / millimeters. Subtract length from meters Subtract length from meters (bar models)
Emergency Services SEN / ASD / KS1 Narrative /  Literacy /TEACCH activities
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Emergency Services SEN / ASD / KS1 Narrative / Literacy /TEACCH activities

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‘At the hospital’ - matching activity. Identify things found in the hospital. With this activity , I laminated and put velcro on the base board and matching cards. Two base boards included and two sets of cards for each baseboard - to cater for readers and non readers. Also appropriate for use as a cut and paste work sheet. ‘Who board - emergency services’ - another activity which I laminated / added velcro. Matching images of emergency service workers to their names. Again, also suitable for cut and paste activity if you prefer not to laminate. Suitable for mainstream and SEN - created for KS3 learners with autism and learning disabilities.
Colourful Semantics - Who doing what, Emergency services themed. Interactive book, SEN, ASD
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Colourful Semantics - Who doing what, Emergency services themed. Interactive book, SEN, ASD

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This is an interactive book I made for a ‘Community’ / ‘People who help us’ topic. I printed and laminated all of the pages and stuck velcro on the who / doing / what symbols underneath each picture. I printed the last 3 pages twice, cutting out the cards from one version and using the other version as a base page, on which to keep the cars when not in use. I include 2 options of this book - one with more text (i.e. ‘What is the policeman doing?’) and the other kept simple (i.e. ‘Who doing what?’) I’d be happy to change the frame colours if you use a different colour system for the categories. Feel free to message me. Used for children and young people with ASD / SALT / Learning Disabilities.
Pattern Cards - Visual perception, fine motor skills, organisation. Autism, SEN
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Pattern Cards - Visual perception, fine motor skills, organisation. Autism, SEN

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Pattern Cards. Pupils are given a card with a pattern and need to reproduce this pattern onto a blank card. Used with KS3 pupils with autism and other special needs to develop visual perception, together with organisational and fine motor skills. Some pupils find these very easy, others really struggle. Various cards with various levels of difficulty. Some are single colours, others have a variety of colours. Cards with 9 squares and 16 squares. Blank cards and coloured squares to place on cards are included. Also suitable for younger pupils and those without SEN.
Agony Uncle - drugs advice activity, autism, SEN, Asdan
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Agony Uncle - drugs advice activity, autism, SEN, Asdan

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PowerPoint created for Asdan PHSE course. Pupils act as agony aunts / uncles and write advice to other young people who have queries about drug use. Used for Year 9 pupils with autism / SEN. Developed for PSHE Short course but can be used for general drugs education.
Continent sorting activity
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Continent sorting activity

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Activity created for primary SEN group. Children cut and pasted a map of the continent and a picture of that continents animals into the appropriate box. Some animal pictures are on a map of the continent to give children a visual clue - because of this I gave them the strip of maps and the strip of animal pictures separately to avoid confusion. I let the children cut out their pictures themselves to promote fine motor skills.
Phonic sounds peg cards
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Phonic sounds peg cards

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Phonic peg cards - children attach a clothes peg to the correct sound. Sounds included: ck, th, ch, ir, sh, er, ur 3 cards for each sound, apart from ‘sh’ which has 9 cards. 27 cards in total. Best laminated so cards stay intact with repeated use. Practical activity, could be used as independent task. Designed for SEN group but equally appropriate for mainstream.
Using commas to write lists (Robin's Winter Song)
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Using commas to write lists (Robin's Winter Song)

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One sheet to introduce the idea of writing lists. One sheet to support children to use the information from the list to write a sentence. This sheet ties in with Robin's Winter Song which we are beginning after half term but doesn't need reference to the book - it could just be an independent list of what animals eat. Designed for KS2 children with significant SEN / autism.
ASD  / Autism / SEN - Associations, workstation task
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ASD / Autism / SEN - Associations, workstation task

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4 baseboards and 16 cards (best laminated to make the resource last longer). Baseboards each showing 4 items. Pupils use the accompanying cards to identify which items go together (e.g. head goes with cap). Boards and cards are colour coded to ensure that the sets don’t get mixed up. I used these as workstation tasks / morning jobs but they could also be printed and used as worksheets. Designed for children with autism / social communication difficulties to develop reasoning / logical thinking and for the child to begin to make connections. Can be extended by asking the child / young person to explain their reasoning.