Mardi Gras: A Recipe for… (disaster?)
Following a recipe can be a fun way to promote braille literacy, while also working on cooking and independent living skills.
Following a recipe can be a fun way to promote braille literacy, while also working on cooking and independent living skills.
Make your reading calendar accessible to braille users with these ideas!
Nature walks can inspire students with visual impairments to write about what they find.
Setting up an experience area in the Creative Play center of preschool classrooms can help children who are blind or visually impaired or multiply disabled to develop a deeper understanding of stories
This story combines mantras, meditations and pretend story writing in a storytelling activity that helps students with visual impairment & autism spectrum disorder to understand their emotional levels
Braille “Twister” is a fun way to practice braille literacy skills while incorporating movement with students who are blind or visually impaired with individual dot configurations.
This interactive book uses a theme-based approach to bring literacy to life for children who are blind or visually impaired or with multiple disabilities.
Tips to adapt and modify the game of “Battleship” for children who are blind or visually impaired using braille and tactile symbols.
What’s Gnu? is an easy game to adapt for beginning braille readers, which can be fun to play at home with sighted siblings or in an inclusive classroom.
APH Tactile Editing Marks Kit makes editing accessible to braille students who are blind or visually impaired or deafblind.