We answer Sherry’s two-part question on engaging autistic learners in an ASL classroom and creating a sane, effective plan for frequent absences. We share concrete, low-lift strategies that center detail-focused questioning, visual supports, and input-replacement systems that actually work.
• Detail-first prompts and either-or questions for autistic learners • Visual status cards and icon-based sentence frames • Predictable routines for partner work and turn-taking • Comparison tasks anchored in daily routines • Input-replacement hours instead of one-off makeup packets • Duolingo and curated media lists as low-friction tools • Clear policies and gentle boundaries for chronic absences • Resources and training recommendations including Linda Hodgdon • Practical systems to reduce teacher workload
Leave a review if this helped you so that we can reach more educators and let them know that like this is a cool place to hang out on the interwebs
Love this episode? Get access to over 150+ trainings, instructional coaching, and an amazing peer community of proficiency-oriented teachers in the Practical Proficiency Network
Submit your questions about proficiency, grammar, or creating communicative classroom environments through this link: https://airtable.com/appOp9IY7Ah77oYup/pagpRzuEqAVZgBnrk/form
Podden och tillhörande omslagsbild på den här sidan tillhör
Devon Gunning | La Libre Language Learning. Innehållet i podden är skapat av Devon Gunning | La Libre Language Learning och inte av,
eller tillsammans med, Poddtoppen.