Posted on

New Product :: Winter Emotion Match-Up Puzzles

These break apart puzzles are a fun and easy way to help students develop their empathy skills and learn to recognize feelings and emotions in others.

Each 2-piece puzzle features a fun character that must be matched up with its correct situation. 8 different feelings in each of 5 different winter and Christmas characters, for a total of 40 puzzles! Puzzles are presented in full color as well as a printer-friendly black and white version.

Winter Emotion Match-Up Puzzles

Winter Emotion Match-Up Puzzles

Winter Emotion Match-Up PuzzlesHelps students learn the following emotions:

  • Angry
  • Excited
  • Happy
  • Sad
  • Nervous/Worried
  • Shy
  • Silly
  • Surprised

SaveSave

Posted on

New Product :: Halloween Emotion Match-Up Puzzles

These break apart puzzles are a fun and easy way to help students develop their empathy skills and learn to recognize feelings and emotions in others.

Each 2-piece puzzle features a fun character that must be matched up with its correct situation. 8 different feelings in each of 5 different Halloween characters, for a total of 40 puzzles! Puzzles are presented in full color as well as a printer-friendly black and white version.

Halloween Emotion Puzzles

Halloween Emotion Puzzles

Halloween Emotion PuzzlesHelps students learn the following emotions:

  • Angry
  • Confused
  • Excited
  • Happy
  • Sad
  • Scared
  • Surprised
  • Worried

 

SaveSaveSaveSave

Posted on

New Product :: Apple-Themed Behavior Sort Activity

This fun activity was designed to help students discriminate between positive, appropriate, or expected behavior and negative, inappropriate, or unexpected behavior.

Apple Behavior Activity

It activity contains 16 positive behavior cards and 16 negative behavior cards in both full-color and printer-friendly black and white. The engaging pictures provide visual support for younger non-reading students or those with Autism or other disabilities. Students sort the behaviors and while doing so can be asked questions such as:

“Why is this behavior inappropriate for school?”
“How do you think someone would feel if this happened to them?” “Is this rule the same at home and at school?”
“Has this ever happened to you? What happened?”

Apple Behavior Activity Apple Behavior Activity
The activity refers to behaviors as “super sweet” or “sour situation” so you can use your own terms (i.e. positive, appropriate, or expected behavior) to reinforce whatever vocabulary your students are familiar most with.

SaveSave