** Please note that the colors may vary slightly from what you see on screen, depending on the printing service chosen. – Take the files to your local print shop or by using online printing services and ask for a heavyweight, matte photo paper or card stock. – You can print the files at home using a heavyweight, matte photo paper or card stock Please let us know if you have any questions about or problems with your download. If you have an account with us, you log in to your account and click on “Downloads” to find your order and download the purchased file. – Click “Download”, save the file to your computer and print. If you didn’t recevie the email, please check your spam folder. – After payment is confirmed, you will be taken to the download page, AND an order confirmation email will be sent to you with your download link. Please contact me for a commercial license. Reselling, sharing, and derivative work are not allowed. You can print as many sheets as you want for personal use. Colors may vary slightly due to viewing different monitors.
No physical product will be shipped and the frame is not included. ♥ 4 Signs (6.61″ X 1.68″H) – 1 “Good Morning” sign, 1 “Good Afternoon” sign, 1 “Good Evening” sign, and 1 “Good Day” sign. Be sure to check out our chore charts and other routine cards.įive high-quality jpg files to be printed on 8.5″ x 11″ or A4 size paper in one zip file. Use the visual routine cards and signs to help your kid/toddler to understand the tasks he/she needs to accomplish each day. Or whatever suits you and your child’s creative hearts.This cute printable visual daily routine cards set comes with 24 routine cards, 2 blank cards for you to write on, and 4 “Good Morning!”, “Good Afternoon!”, “Good Evening”, and “Good Day” signs. If you have the ability to laminate the printable you can use dry erase markers to mark off the boxes. In order to save printing this out every day I put it on my fridge and use star magnets with it. Other than that though it’s been smooth sailing. My daughter loves to run and put her star on the chart. They still do happen but not as frequently, and we have run into issues where something was not on the schedule that we were asking her to do. With the implementation of this visual schedule at home, we have had fewer meltdowns than ever before. So being the blogging mama I am I made my own. I was surprised to find that there weren’t very many options. So I set out to find a schedule that covered her bed time and morning routine. My daughters worst times are mornings and night time transitions. With the success of this at school, I was interested to see if it would help us at home. Having behaviors once a week when previously she was having them every day. Since the incorporation of this, she has done very well at school. When I mentioned the idea to her teachers at school they were very enthusiastic about it and also incorporated a PECS system for her to use when frustrated. She thought that it would be good for her to have more understanding of what is being asked of her. The idea of a chart was suggested to me by my daughters speech pathologist. Homeschool Visual Schedule Why we use one.