Free spring speech therapy activities, reinforcers, and clipart! Download and use now!
Happy spring! I can’t wait for warmer weather! I have some spring-themed free resources and clipart I wanted to put in one easy place for you to grab and use in your therapy sessions and classrooms.
Gliding Minimal Pair Flowers: Target the phonological error of gliding in the initial position with this activity! Use this activity in a sensory bin activity or on its own with any game.
Spring Themed Receptive Identification Photos: This activity works on listening comprehension by receptively identifying a picture when it is described. Use it to target listening skills or have the student describe the pictures using descriptors, pronouns, and verbs in a sentence.
Sports Themed Reinforcers: Baseball season is coming! This also includes basketball and soccer themes to target any goal. Use it as a motivator to make any activity engaging.
St Patrick’s Day Conversation and Writing Prompts: Use for conversation starters, creative writing, group discussions, social skills groups, carryover articulation, writing centers and more in speech therapy or the classroom! A NO PRINT option is included with 1 question per page to use on a Smartboard, computer, or tablet.
Seasons Scenes Clipart: Perfect images to use if you create resources or to use in classrooms! Includes summer, winter, fall, and spring scenes. One set includes window frames and one set without.
Let me know what you think of these freebies when you leave feedback! I love to hear from you!
Would you like access to exclusive freebies not available in my Teachers Pay Teachers store? Sign up below for access to the freebie library – plus a discount code!
If you enjoyed this post, please share it!
Follow my blog with Bloglovin
I liked how you mentioned using sports as a way to make any activity engaging. My wife and I want to help our daughter develop her speech. I’ll be sure to ask her if she wants to watch sports when practicing her therapy.
Hi Allison,
Are you interested in having any of your therapy materials translated to Spanish? I ask this because I work with a mostly Spanish-speaking population in the public schools. It’s hard to come by good basic concepts materials in English much less Spanish. I would love to help do that work to make a Spanish version – from sheer self-interest but also from an interest of increasing the number of materials available in multiple languages. Thanks, Pam.