Teacher-facing role-play cards providing common scenarios for practicing emotional communication and functional speech phrases.
A worksheet for students to practice filtering their impulses. It provides 'fast' thoughts for requested scenarios (Chromebook, weird sightings, disagreements) and includes a cut-out desk strip and the TKNA filter checklist.
A facilitation guide for teachers and parents to help the student apply impulse control strategies. Includes scripts for specific scenarios, the THINK acronym breakdown, and an expanded observation log.
Printable desk strips and a strategy menu designed for an ADHD student. Features the TKNA filter (Thoughtful, Kind, Necessary, Appropriate) and the 'Pause' buttons in a high-contrast, gamer-themed aesthetic.
Instructional slides for a 5th grade student focusing on impulse control through the 'Inner Remote' and 'Pump the Brakes' metaphors. Includes specific scenarios for transitions and the T.H.I.N.K. filter.
Facilitation guide for teachers to deliver the 'Dawn Patrol' lesson on self-discipline, including read-aloud questions and activity steps.
Easy-to-read role-play script cards for 1st graders to practice self-discipline in common school and home scenarios.
A cut-and-paste sorting activity for 1st graders to identify self-disciplined behaviors versus those needing improvement, following 'The Paperboy' lesson.
Instructional slides introducing self-discipline through 'The Paperboy' for 1st graders, featuring dawn-themed visuals and key vocabulary.
A set of printable drawing paths for the String Sync activity, ranging from easy (circular) to extreme (the Vortex spiral). Each path includes start/end markers and decreasing path widths to increase the teamwork challenge.
A comprehensive facilitator guide for the String Sync teamwork activity, including setup instructions, step-by-step procedures, and guided debrief questions focusing on communication and problem-solving.
A refined student worksheet for reflecting on daily experiences using two distinct buckets for 'good' and 'hard' events, now completely anonymous without name fields.