Assistive Planner: Academic
Author | : | |
Rating | : | 4.80 (536 Votes) |
Asin | : | 1515325695 |
Format Type | : | paperback |
Number of Pages | : | 134 Pages |
Publish Date | : | 2018-02-13 |
Language | : | English |
DESCRIPTION:
I wanted a planner my daughter wouldn't mind having on her desk at school, so this cover is purposely designed for kids who are growing up and want to be treated like it.. I designed this planner for my own child because I was tired of the useless calendar the school sold at the start of each year. There is space to draw and color during times of stress, as well as fun conversation starters at the end of each week. ***BACK TO SCHOOL BOOK DRIVE! For every planner sold in August and September, another will be donated to a special ed department for a student to use!*** This planner is suited to the organization and communication needs of autistic students, but any student who needs a better planner tool can benefit. Not only does it provide open spaces to write down homework assignments or tests, it contains reminder spaces to help your student write down important notes, give you an indication of how his school day went, and more. Even worse, the autism-centric tools I find are usually covered in rainbows, balloon letters, cartoon children in wheelchairs (for some reason), or puzzle piece logos
A valuable tool to the dinner table of every household with school age children! Patricia, Room With Books This is the most brilliant idea for an academic planner that I have personally seen! Most planners are vague and difficult to use until late middle school or high school. This is usable at all age levels and regardless of the number of classes or subjects learned in a given day!As one who had, and continues to have, contact with a variety of children through friends, neighbors, my own children and now my grandchildren, I . "The school planner version of the Zen tome "Tidying Up"" according to YoTeach. This planner is a lifesaver, a school year saver. Instead of cutesy fluff that marketers think kids like, it has cool, calm, perfectly organized sections for what students actually need. As a Special Ed teacher, I especially appreciate the emoticons, which allow me to communicate vital info to a child's parent--"Really, how was your child's day?"--in a microsecond. In elementary, teachers freely use stickers to do this jo