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Item description

You’ll love this Christmas Language Learning Bag craft activity, perfect for teaching vocabulary and concepts for special education, ABA programming, pre-k, kindergarten, and early learners! This hands-on engaging activity requires no prep and can be ready to use in minutes! Just provide each student with a small paper bag, and you’re ready to go! Students color and cut out each picture card. Lead students to explore each card, and address many expressive and receptive language skills, including vocabulary and concept development, receptive and expressive identification, and more! This activity is easy to tailor to the needs of your learners! Students can then place the cards in their learning bags.

 

This activity includes a bag label plus eleven large easy to cut cards, each featuring a different Christmas themed picture. The following pictures are included:

Santa, Santa’s helpers, Santa’s workshop, Christmas tree, stocking, gift, reindeer, milk and cookies, candy cane, ornament, and sleigh.

 

Created by a special education teacher and Board Certified Behavior Analyst, this resource was designed specifically for students with special needs who benefit from structured errorless learning experiences!

 

This activity makes a great small group, large group, or center activity! Also great for use by instructional assistants or substitutes!

 

Keep the bags in the classroom throughout the week and pull them out for an engaging and quick no-prep review activity throughout the week! Or, send the bags home with students to review and practice with family! Makes for a great language building activity!

 

This is activity is perfect for early learners, students with special needs, or students just learning to work on their own. Errorless learning tasks are wonderful for helping to teach independent work skills to early learners with and without autism or other special needs. Because there are no wrong answers, the potential for frustration is reduced, and students may be able to complete tasks independently or with minimal support. Do you have students who tend to frustrate easily, or are just learning to follow simple instructions? Errorless learning activities may be a good choice for increasing tolerance for task completion and developing important independent work skills!