We are a team of professional Occupational Therapists, Speech Therapists, Behavioural Practitioners, Counselors and Teachers who enjoy creating resources to support children and young people to build confidence, resilience and ensure optimal learning. We are motivated by passion to create educational and therapeutic resources which are evidence-based, creative, innovative and flexible.
We are a team of professional Occupational Therapists, Speech Therapists, Behavioural Practitioners, Counselors and Teachers who enjoy creating resources to support children and young people to build confidence, resilience and ensure optimal learning. We are motivated by passion to create educational and therapeutic resources which are evidence-based, creative, innovative and flexible.
School readiness refers to whether a child is ready to make an easy and successful transition into school. The development of school readiness skills allows school teachers to expand and further develop a child’s skills in the specific areas of social interaction, play, language, emotional development, physical skills, literacy and fine motor skills.
Without these basic skills already established upon entry to school, children can very quickly find themselves playing ‘catch up’ compared to their peers that are advancing more quickly. This is a great 12 page handout which explores various building blocks which are important for school readiness. These include areas such as self regulation, sensory processing, receptive and expressive language, executive functioning, personal selfcare, social skills, mobility skills, concentration and attention. This resource includes a letter to parents to explain that although these school readiness skills are great, they definitely not the be all and end all.
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Anxiety and fearful behaviour can be common in children, especially as they come across new situations and experiences. This is quite typical and children often learn to cope with different fears and worries. At times however they may need some extra support. This five page document is great to isolate what is normal anxiety in children and provides strategies and interventions to support children who are experiencing concerning anxiety which requires support and intervention.
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This file folder is a great concrete way for students to explore good and bad manners.
Students are encouraged to match and sort the various manner cards and reflect on whether they are good,/bad, positive/negative or helpful/unhelpful manners.
This resource includes the following:
About this Resource
Reflection time
Title Pages for the File Folder
Answer Keys
Sorting Templates
Behaviour Choice Cards in Colour
Black and White Choices Cards for Colouring Version
Create your own Choices Template
Back Cover Option – “I have great manners” pledge and colouring poster.
This resource is versatile and can be used as a quick reference guide, a sort and match activity lesson, within individual or small group sessions or even as a supplement to your SEL lessons!
Laminate and glue this resource to a file folder for repeated use and longevity.
You will need scissors, glue and a file folder. Alternatively, you can assemble this resource using hook and look adhesive dots. Simply apply these to the page templates of Good and Bad Manners and use the sorting cards to encourage students to differentiate and reflect on the various choices.
The following Social Narrative has been designed to support children through grief and loss.
We can’t protect children from the pain of loss, but we can help support them through it and build healthy coping skills.
Most children know something about death as they have seen it on TV shows. But it’s very different when it happens to someone close to them. They often have a lot of questions and how they respond is different for each child.
This Social Narrative explores the following:
What is death?
Why do people die?
What happens to them now?
What is a funeral
What happens at the funeral?
Your feelings
It’s hard when someone dies
(reassurance & acknowledgment)
Talking about your feelings
Feeling & Emotion Cards
Going to the funeral
Remembering the good times
Calming and Coping Strategies
Calming & Coping Strategy Cards
Create your own Coping Strategy Cards (activity worksheet)
What will happen in the future?
It’s important to talk
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KEY WORDS: Behaviour support, social skills, autism, disability, anger management, emotions, regulation, therapy, counselling, psychology, strategy, data analysis, social relating, behaviour chart, mindfulness, reward, behaviour management, classroom behaviour, behaviour reward, punch cards, behaviour star, student behaviour, positive reinforcement, hitting, kicking, punching, bully, self esteem, teamwork, communication, speech therapy, coping skills, self discovery, puberty, relationship and sexuality, education, special need, development delay, ADD, ADHD, concentration, hyperactive
KEY WORDS: Behaviour support, social skills, autism, disability, anger management, emotions, regulation, therapy, counselling, psychology, strategy, data analysis, social relating, behaviour chart, mindfulness, reward, behaviour management, classroom behaviour, behaviour reward, punch cards, behaviour star, student behaviour, positive reinforcement, hitting, kicking, punching, bully, self esteem, teamwork, communication, speech therapy, coping skills, self discovery, puberty, relationship and sexuality, education, special need, development delay, ADD, ADHD, concentration, hyperactive
This is a fun, engaging and creative craft activity lesson which encourages a positive growth mindset for children by focusing on self-love and self-talk. Children are to match unhelpful thoughts with the corresponding helpful grounding thought. This activity will help to encourage children to reframe thinking patterns from negative to positive.
We all have thoughts. Some thoughts are “helpful”. They make us feel confident, happy and brave. Some other thoughts are “unhelpful” and they can make us feel worried, nervous, sad or angry. Throughout this activity, you will explore helpful and unhelpful thoughts and how they impact you. Learning to reframe thought patterns is a powerful life long skill that builds self-esteem, confidence and resilience.
THIS RESOURCE INCLUDES:
About this resource
What are helpful and unhelpful thoughts
Reframing Negative Thoughts Worksheets
Examples of Unhelpful and Helpful thoughts
15 sets of mitten matches (unhelpful vs helpful thoughts)
THIS MINI LESSON IS A GREAT ADDITION TO YOUR COUNSELING OR SEL LESSONS! GREAT FOR INDIVIDUAL OR GROUP WORK.
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• Each time you give feedback on a product, TPT gives you feedback credits that you use to lower the cost of your future purchases. Feedback to TpT Sellers, just like feedback to students, is a valuable tool to aid improvement of future products. Go to your “My Purchases” page to view past downloads, and provide a rating and comment.
• You can be the first to know about new discounts, freebies and product launches. Look for the green star next to the TpT store logo and click it to become a follower and receive email updates about the store.
9 Pages worth of key tips and strategies to reduce the intensity of challenging behaviours and prevent the behaviours from escalating. This is a great resource for teachers, clinicians, therapists and allied health staff in developing Behaviour Support Plans and/or other plans to support the reduction of challenging behaviour.
Document includes key strategies for how to respond to challenging behaviours. This package includes information around:
What are reactive strategies (including information about antecedent control)
How to reduce risks (personal risks, environmental factors and individual risks)
Personal space and body posture considerations
Interactional guidelines (before and during behaviours)
How to neutralise the situation
Meeting needs or refocusing their attention
Key Points to remember…
Great for teachers and parents!
This is a fun, engaging, creative and non-threatening intervention which is great for students to explore emotional regulation, anger management, reflective practice and self care.
What to do?
1.Encourage students to explore each of the 24 realistic scenarios on each page and reflect on how that scenario would make them feel. This also encourages empathy, compassion and consideration into the feelings and actions of others as they resonate with each scenario.
2.The next step is for the students to explore the “Anger Management Strategy Ingredients” list and tick what anger management strategy they could or would employ and use for that particular scenario. This helps students to reflect, explore and gain insight into their own feelings and behaviours.
3.Students then put those ingredients into the “blender” which is located on each page to cement the lesson. There are 24 visuals for already developed anger management strategies which students can utilize. There are an addition 12 blank visual cards for students to explore some of their own individual and unique self-care strategies that work for them.
4.Lastly, students can create a name for that particular anger management smoothie. This heightens the learning outcomes and students become more likely to explore and employ these anger management strategies within their everyday life.
NOTE – There is a COMPLETED example page so students can see this resource in action!
This lesson helps students personify and project their grief onto their own monster that they create with the therapeutic aim to reflect and gain insight. This intervention asks students to create a representation of grief and give it a name. By externalizing grief, it becomes something that they can deal with and manage. It is no longer an abstract idea that they have no control over. It becomes manageable.
Everyone grieves differently and experiences different emotional reactions. Some may not want to discuss while others may want to share memories of their loved one. Therefore, it is important to allow every individual to express themselves as much as they feel comfortable doing so. This activity supports the individual to do this.
This therapeutic intervention requires the therapist to be very curious and unconditionally accepting of the Grief Monster that the student creates and imagines. Remember the vital role of empathy and at the end of the intervention sincerely thank the student for sharing what their grief looks like as a monster to support integration. Further discussion ideas for integration might include exploration of the themes and trends that arise during this intervention.
This resource includes:
Therapist Notes
We are sorry for your loss…
What is grief?
How does your body feel today?
What feeds your grief?
Getting to know your Grief Monster?
Safe Place for your Grief Monster
What it looks like?
Monster Diaries
Coping Strategies – Ways to care for your Grief Monster
My Helping Hand
Monster feelings chart Poster
Post Session Reflective questions
Building your own Grief Monster
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• Each time you give feedback on a product, TPT gives you feedback credits that you use to lower the cost of your future purchases. Feedback to TpT Sellers, just like feedback to students, is a valuable tool to aid improvement of future products. Go to your “My Purchases” page to view past downloads, and provide a rating and comment.
• You can be the first to know about new discounts, freebies and product launches. Look for the green star next to the TpT store logo and click it to become a follower and receive email updates about the store.
This two page client Progress Notes Template is a great tool for all therapists and counsellors regardless of who you work with.
This template allows you to record and document the following:
appearance
functioning
communication
transition into and out of session
mood/ affect
limits set and response of the child
thought content
toys and play behaviour
themes
prosocial behaviours
plan/ recommendations/ follow up
extra notes.
This File Folder is a great concrete way for students to explore Helpful and Unhelpful Coping Skills.
Students are encouraged to match and sort the various Coping Skills and reflect on whether they are Helpful or Unhelpful.
This resource is versatile and can be used as a quick reference guide, a sort and match activity lesson, within individual or small group sessions or even as a supplement to your SEL lessons! Laminate and glue this resource to a file folder for repeated use and longevity.
You will need scissors, glue and a file folder. Alternatively, you can assemble this resource using hook and look adhesive dots. Simply apply these to the page templates of Helpful and Unhelpful Coping Skills and use the sorting cards to encourage students to differentiate and reflect on the various skills.
This resource includes the following:
About this Resource
Reflection time
Title Pages for the File Folder
Answer Keys
Sorting Templates
Coping Skill Cards in Colour
Black and White Coping Skill Cards for Colouring Version
Create your own Choices Template
Back Cover Option – “I have Helpful Coping Skills” poster and Colouring page.
This resource is great for parents, teachers and others who are supporting children who may display challenging or behaviours or concern. This Behaviour Support Templeate focuses on feelings, thoughts and actions in each state. The states include:
Calm/Recovery - Relaxed and Happy State (green page)
Level 1 - Early Warning Signs (yellow page)
Level 2 - Escalation (orange page)
Level 3 - Climax (red page)
This resource includes a completed example of the Behaviour Support Plan for reference as well as a template of the Behaviour Support Plan which is blank.
This can also be utilized to support the students to reflect on their own behaviour cycle and trajectory, explore their own thoughts, feelings and physiological responses as well as isolate what supports they may require to assist them.
This resource introduces you to what IPRP’s are and the process of developing one.
This resource includes:
What is an IPRP?
-Key principles and aspects of an IPRP
-Difference between Incident Prevention & Incident Response
-Completed EXAMPLES including table format and behavioural escalation curve
-Editable (type straight into) template – both table format and behavioural escalation curve
-Supplementary ABC Data Collection Sheets
The following workbook supports students to understand their anxiety and learn about coping strategies to help them get out of their head, out of panic mode and into the here and now. This workbook is full of worksheets, activities, posters, handouts and much more! Find everything you are needing in this no prep and print counseling workbook.
This mini-lesson explores:
All about Emotions
All about Anxiety (including worry facts)
The Anxiety & Stress Continuum
Anxiety
-What does anxiety look and feel like?
-How does your body feel when you are anxious?
Your body’s alarm system (fight/flight/freeze)
Panic Button Questionnaire
When I feel anxious…
Anxiety & Panic Attacks
-The difference
-Symptoms
Scale of Worry
-Creating your own Scale of Worry
-Rating Worries Worksheet
Asking for help
What do you need from others when you are anxious?
Calming & Coping Strategies
-Strategy Cards
-Coping Skills Rating Scales
-Deep Breathing – Chasing Rainbows
-Sensory Diffuses & Visualisation
-5-4-3-2-1 Grounding Technique
-Anxiety Worksheet
-Release your Worries
-Letting Go of my Thoughts
-Panic Button Coping Skills Poster
-Getting Help
-Personal Growth Challenge
-3 Good Things – Practicing Gratitude
-Inspirational Quote Poster
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STORE CREDITS - Did you know…?
• Each time you give feedback on a product, TPT gives you feedback credits that you use to lower the cost of your future purchases. Feedback to TpT Sellers, just like feedback to students, is a valuable tool to aid improvement of future products. Go to your “My Purchases” page to view past downloads, and provide a rating and comment.
• You can be the first to know about new discounts, freebies and product launches. Look for the green star next to the TpT store logo and click it to become a follower and receive email updates about the store.
This resource is great for parents, teachers and others who are supporting children who may display challenging or behaviours or concern. This Behaviour Support Templeate focuses on feelings, thoughts and actions in each state. The states include:
Calm/Recovery - Relaxed and Happy State (green page)
Level 1 - Early Warning Signs (yellow page)
Level 2 - Escalation (orange page)
Level 3 - Climax (red page)
This resource includes a completed example of the Behaviour Support Plan for reference as well as a template of the Behaviour Support Plan which is blank.
This can also be utilized to support the students to reflect on their own behaviour cycle and trajectory, explore their own thoughts, feelings and physiological responses as well as isolate what supports they may require to assist them.
We all have hands and feet. We can choose to use our hands and feet to either HELP OTHERS or HURT OTHERS This mini lesson explores physical aggression through activities and worksheets which foster reflection to help students gain insight into their behaviours.
This mini-lesson explores:
What is physical aggression?
What are helping hands and what are hurting hands? (including behavioural examples with visual supports)
Exploring what to do when they become angry (calm down strategies)
Reflecting on the students behaviours on both helping and hurting others.
Exploring the impact and consequences of aggression to others as well as their self.
Creative activities including Cut and Sort, Colouring, Promise Pledge and find-a-word.
Mindset is everything! This workbook supports children to develop a growth mindset and learn not to give up. It incorporates reading, expressive writing, critical thinking, reflective insight development while also teaching social and emotional learning and growth mindset skills for little learners.
The following 75 page workbook focuses on the following topics to encourage emotional wellbeing and resilience:
• Anger management
• Anxiety Management
• Emotional Regulation
• Resilience
• Self-Belief and Confidence
• Positive Thinking
• Relaxation
• Social relating
• Reflective behaviours
• Healthy choices
• Coping Skills
• Understanding your engine
• Problem solving
• Isolating and labelling behaviours
• Creative Visualisation
• Find-a-words
and much much more…
This feelings and behaviour workbook includes:
Introductory ‘about your workbook” – learning about the individual
Anger rules – what’s okay/not okay
Feeling find-a-word
Body Keeps the Score exercise – reflective exercise
Volcano anger management exercise and activity
Poster – what to do when you feel angry
Reflective anger management exercises
Star Tips for controlling anger
Emotions Poster “printable”
Rules to support change – poster
Anger Management worksheets
Deep breathing exercise
Coping skills exercise/activity
Understand your Engine – Engine Speeds
How I feel Today diary entry
Healthy me diary/journal
Cool Down Thoughts Poste
Problem Solving Reflective Activity – stop and think/choices
Knowing you feelings – reflective activity – frustration/happy/angry/mad
Helping Hand activity – who to go for support/trust
Biggest Hurt and Sadness activity
Creative Activity – Make a safe home for your pet
Bucket Activity – reflective care
SPOTLIGHT activity
And much more….
This is a workbook that can be printed and used for all children, including those with behavioural and anger management issues to support behaviour change.
This package includes over 36 exercises and activities to do with children, as well as tips and behavioural reinforcer pages.
This package has been utilized for all children and has been used within a school setting as part of a “self care” program. This can also be utilized for children with ADHD, intellectual disability, autism and/or developmental delay.
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This lesson helps students personify and project their grief onto their own monster that they create with the therapeutic aim to reflect and gain insight. This intervention asks students to create a representation of grief and give it a name. By externalizing grief, it becomes something that they can deal with and manage. It is no longer an abstract idea that they have no control over. It becomes manageable.
Everyone grieves differently and experiences different emotional reactions. Some may not want to discuss while others may want to share memories of their loved one. Therefore, it is important to allow every individual to express themselves as much as they feel comfortable doing so. This activity supports the individual to do this.
This therapeutic intervention requires the therapist to be very curious and unconditionally accepting of the Grief Monster that the student creates and imagines. Remember the vital role of empathy and at the end of the intervention sincerely thank the student for sharing what their grief looks like as a monster to support integration. Further discussion ideas for integration might include exploration of the themes and trends that arise during this intervention.
This resource includes:
Therapist Notes
We are sorry for your loss…
What is grief?
How does your body feel today?
What feeds your grief?
Getting to know your Grief Monster?
Safe Place for your Grief Monster
What it looks like?
Monster Diaries
Coping Strategies – Ways to care for your Grief Monster
My Helping Hand
Monster feelings chart Poster
Post Session Reflective questions
Building your own Grief Monster
Check out some of our best sellers below! Don’t forget to follow our store!
STORE CREDITS - Did you know…?
• Each time you give feedback on a product, TPT gives you feedback credits that you use to lower the cost of your future purchases. Feedback to TpT Sellers, just like feedback to students, is a valuable tool to aid improvement of future products. Go to your “My Purchases” page to view past downloads, and provide a rating and comment.
• You can be the first to know about new discounts, freebies and product launches. Look for the green star next to the TpT store logo and click it to become a follower and receive email updates about the store.
This is a creative and engaging intervention based on Trauma Focused Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (TFCBT) principles to support students to explore Domestic Violence.
This mini-lesson explores the following key areas:
What is Domestic Violence and examples?
Learning about the symbol of Domestic Violence (purple ribbon)
Exploring fault/blame mentality
Exploring Secrets
Reflective Questions (feelings, thoughts, what if and what would you do questions?
Exploring what you would do if you were not believed or listened too
Your “Helping Hand” – exploring those who are in their support system
Safety Planning (what children can do in an emergency and calling for help in an emergency)
NOTE - The purpose of this resource is to support children’s understanding of this topic to help them keep safe. Education helps to keep our children safe and work towards reducing violence and abuse in the community. At All Therapy resources we are devoted to increasing awareness of all aspects of children’s safety, particularly that of personal safety and protective behaviours within Family Violence Systems.
This resource is more question and reflective based as opposed to psych educative. This resource has been created with a trauma-informed framework in mind to ensure that regardless of the student audience the questions can be utilized as either a foundation on which to either ascertain current knowledge or to ascertain thoughts and feelings on the subject matter. From such foundation, these questions allow students to grown in their knowledge and insight on this topic.
NOTE: Therapists are encouraged to utilize their own therapeutic and clinical judgment and insight as to how to utilize this resource.
This portfolio is engaging, reflective and thought-provoking. Everything you need to cover this topic is found in this portfolio. It covers everything from what is anxiety, warning signs, triggers, worry scales, questionnaires, learning about our body’s alarm system and flight/fight system, calming and coping strategies, brain dumping your worries, learning what is in and out of your control, crafts and much more!
This portfolio has been developed to support children to manage their anxiety and worries, build self-confidence and create a positive thinking framework. This workbook is a must have for any teacher, parent and counsellor as it is jam packed with everything needed to tackle anxiety once and for all in a very trauma-informed and positive behavioural support approach.
This portfolio is divided into six individual lessons. You can choose to use each lesson in isolation or scaffold through the lessons one by one. The six lessons include:
1.All About Anxiety
What is Anxiety?
What does anxiety look and feel like?
My anxiety checklist
Anxiety Triggers
Scale of worry poster (and worksheet)
When I feel worried worksheet
2.My Panic Button
Your body’s alarm system
Anxiety and stress continuum
My Panic Button Questionnaire
When I feel anxious worksheet
Anxiety & panic attacks
The differences and symptoms
Anxiety and your body
Helpful Thoughts
3.Calming Strategies
Calming Strategy Cards and Rating Scales
Deep Breathing
5-4-3-2-1 Grounding Technique
Asking for Help
Personal Growth Challenge
Gratitude
Exercise and my Weekly Health Plan
Coping Skills Poster
4.Declutter Your Worries
What is a Brain Dump?
What to do?
Brain Dump your worries
When worries pile up
Sorting my worries
Dump your worries craft
Ruminating on your worries
5.My Worry Monster
Physical symptoms of anxiety
Anxiety triggers
Getting to know your worry monster
Creating your worry monster
Your helping hand
Reflective questions
Building your own worry monster templates
6.Choosing to Let Go
Being the pilot of your worries
Your Control Tower (in and out of your control)
My worries airplane craft
Take off! Taking your worries away!
Emergency oxygen mask
In and out of your worries (sorting activity)
Worry affirmations
When we teach mindfulness to children, we are equipping them with the tools to help manage stress and approach life’s challenges.
Mindfulness can help to shape key critical skills that are developed in early childhood. These include the ability for children with attention to task and retain information, shift between tasks and displaying appropriate behaviours. These abilities are known as executive functions and they are essential for more advanced tasks like planning, reasoning, problem-solving and developing social relationships.
So why not give our children the best head start by teaching them all about mindfulness and how they can practice mindfulness and gain the benefits. This “Mindfulness Portfolio” includes everything that your students will need to get started on their mindfulness journey.
This portfolio is divided into six individual lessons. You can choose to use each lesson in isolation or scaffold through the lessons one by one. The six lessons include:
1.What is Mindfulness?
What is Mindfulness?
Questions about Mindfulness Worksheet
STOP Poster
Brainstorm Worksheet
2.Mindful Moments
What are mindful moments?
Mindful Mindset Questions
SPOTLIGHT on today
Put it on Paper Worksheet
3.Exploring Feelings
Your feelings in this moment…
Feelings Pie Chart Activity
Colour Your Emotions Worksheet
Feelings & Emotion Cards
4.Mindful Senses
Mind and Body Connection
Body Scan
Mindfulness & Me Questionnaire
5-4-3-2-1 Mindful Senses
5-4-3-2-1 Mindful Worksheet
5.Mindful Breathing
What is Mindful Breathing
Smelling the Flowers
Tracing your hand with your breath
Balloon Breathing
Blowing Candles
Chasing Rainbows
Hot Chocolate Breathing
6.Craft Activity – Gratitude Tea
What is Gratitude?
Why is Gratitude Important
3 Steps to being grateful
Create your own Gratitude Tea Craft Templates