Distance Learning
Guidance and resources for teachers and families in K–12 schools regarding high quality distance learning.To ensure that you have all of the up-to-date information regarding a variety of areas impacted by COVID-19, please visit the CDE’s Coronavirus (COVID-19) Main Web Page.
For the purposes of the guidance and resources on this page, “distance learning” means instruction in which the student and instructor are in different locations. This may include interacting through the use of a computer and communications technology, as well as delivering instruction and check-in time with the teacher. Distance learning may include video or audio instruction in which the primary mode of communication between the student and instructor is online interaction, instructional television, video, telecourses, or other instruction that relies on computer or communications technology. It may also include the use of print materials incorporating assignments that are the subject of written or oral feedback. This page provides guidance and information for teachers, students, and parents who are transitioning, or have transitioned, to a distance learning model.
Please note that while this page refers to many specific resources to support local educational agencies (LEAs) in developing, improving and extending instruction through their distance learning capabilities, the CDE has not extensively reviewed all resources. Individual LEAs are responsible for assessing the appropriateness of any specific resource prior to implementation.
Content Enrichment and Extension
This section includes links to state and local systems, agencies, and organizations that provide opportunities to enhance distance learning. This collection includes content, resources, and tools that teachers and parents can use to enrich curriculum and promote student engagement.
Digital Resources by Content Area
Arts Education
Online resources to support remote arts education instruction.
During the pandemic, some in-person activities associated with performing arts courses (dance, music, and theatre), such as groups practicing and performing, may sometimes not be possible. Despite this, instruction can continue to focus on the 2019 California Arts Standards associated with the artistic processes of creating, responding, and connecting, and students can continue to practice for performances during independent applied learning time. Educators may also consider how to approach rehearsal and performances through shared technology platforms and other innovative approaches. On April 14, 2021, the California Department of Public Health (CDPH) issued new guidance including industry-specific guidance for Outdoor Seated Live Events and Performances (PDF) and Indoor Seated Live Events and Performances
(PDF). These documents include guidance for rehearsals which may also be useful for schools and districts. Please note that CDPH guidance is subject to change as conditions evolve.
General Arts Education Resources
- For users of Apple products, Apple’s K-12 Teacher Resources
includes Everyone Can Create with free project guides that help teach students to develop and communicate their ideas through drawing, photography, video, and music.
- The Arts Media and Entertainment (AME) Distance Learning Task Force has compiled distance learning collections
for the industry sector pathways Design, Visual and Commercial Arts, Performing Arts, Production and Managerial Arts, and Game Design and all 11 sub-pathways in the AME industry sector.
- The California Department of Education, the California County Superintendents Education Services Association (CCSESA) and The California Arts Project (TCAP) have collaborated to produce an Arts Standards Webinar Series which may be useful to arts educators to build understanding of the 2019 California Arts Standards as they plan standards-based distance learning lessons.
- The CCSESA Arts Initiative produced Creativity at the Core, Professional Learning Modules
, 21 Professional learning modules for arts educators on various topics. Module 2 is Distance Learning Through the Arts: Equal Access for All.
- Educators may wish to contact the CCSESA Regional Arts Leads
and the TCAP Regional Site for their county to find out about additional supports for distance learning that may be available in their region.
- The DC Arts and Humanities Education Collaborative offers a Distance Learning Resource Database
which is organized for searching for lessons by elementary, middle, and high school. It includes online and printable visual and performing arts and humanities learning resources for students, teachers, and families.
- Classroom Resources
from The Kennedy Center include “a robust collection of hundreds of digital learning resources: lessons, articles, performance guides, how-tos and much more.” The free resources include a range of different approaches to arts integration. While all of the digital resources here can be useful for remote arts learning, there is also a page dedicated specifically to Arts Education at Home.
- The National Endowment for the Arts web page Resources to Help Ensure Accessibility of Your Virtual Events for People with Disabilities
includes guidance for online learning events.
- PBS Learning Media provides resources and activities for dance
, media arts
, music
, theatre
, and visual arts
.
- TedEd has a curated collection of lessons and videos
arts educators in all disciplines may find useful to supplement and illustrate concepts when designing standards-based distance learning experiences.
Dance Education
- The Dance Studies Association provides resources for moving dance-based pedagogy online. It is designed for university level educators, but the resources may be helpful to secondary level dance educators.
- The KQED If Cities Could Dance
project captures the diversity of culture and genre in California and across the nation by exploring dance from various communities. Teachers may wish to link their lessons to specific videos such as Dear Dancer
, East Bay Hip Hop
, or Memphis Jookin
which may be especially useful for teaching the Responding and Connecting arts standards
.
- Luna Dance Institute offers free online resources
for dance educators including free phone consultations and a practitioner exchange series, Teaching Dance from a Distance.
- The National Dance Education Organization provides free access to their On-Demand Webinar Recordings related to teaching dance online.
Media Arts Education
- Adobe Education Exchange offers Adobe Distance Learning Resources
for educators and students who use Adobe tools in their media arts classes with free lessons, projects, and activities for primary, middle, or secondary school students and teachers.
- The University of Notre Dame Remix
page supports students to learn, explore, and build multimedia (image, audio, video, data) projects. The tutorials, assignments and projects can support high school students as they master the Producing media arts standards
as well as educators who wish to build their own understanding of media arts.
- The Education Development Center, Inc., an international, nonprofit organization website Digital Media Arts
offers free Career Technical Education curriculum for high school students that can be used to provide distance learning in media arts. The website includes overviews and tutorials.
- Kahn Academy offers several storytelling lessons
such as Pixar in a Box, and Imagineering in a Box, thanks to a collaboration with Disney, where students can learn about and practice media arts production.
Music Education
- The California Music Educators Association
provides a resource list with links to support music education through distance learning. The list includes lesson plans and ideas and learning videos.
- The Library of Congress Citizen DJ Project
invites the public to make hip hop music using the free-to-use audio and video from historic speeches, songs, and films in their collections. These materials can be used by educators when teaching the Creating standards in music
.
- The National Association for Music Education received a grant from the Library of Congress to create Teaching with Primary Sources Curriculum Units
. Several of these have been adapted for distance learning. There is also a page with links to free past and upcoming webinars
related to transitioning to online teaching.
- Teach Rock has created a customized lesson plan collection for distance learning
with free activity- and project-based lessons that are formatted for teachers to deliver directly to students.
Theatre Education
- The Association for Theatre in Higher Education offers Resources for Teaching Online
. This extensive list, which is located at the bottom of the page, includes many open-access resources and may be helpful for secondary theatre teachers as they plan distance learning curriculum.
- Educational Theatre Association offers guidance for creating online learning
, which includes “Top Tips from the Field,” guidance for Zoom users, and other resources for creating online learning.
- London’s National Theatre Learning at Home
web page pulls back the curtain for students to view short videos of “How We Made It” and has activities for “How You Can Make It” at home. There are also short basic videos about different jobs such as “What is a Playwrite?” and “What is a Composer?”
Visual Arts Education
- Google Arts & Culture
is a single portal through which to explore and interact with hundreds of museums and works of art. It can be accessed in a browser or downloaded as an app.
- The Metropolitan Museum of Art Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History
pairs essays
and works of art
with chronologies
, telling the story of art and global culture through the Museum’s collection, while #Metkids
provides an interactive timeline appropriate for elementary.
- MOMA Learning
from the Museum of Modern Art provides free distance learning resources and interactives that allow students and teachers to explore different eras, movements, and concepts in art history.
- The National Art Education Association provides a Remote Learning Toolkit
which includes tips for teaching visual arts and design in a distance learning environment, and links to distance learning resources organized by elementary, middle, and secondary.
English Language Arts
Online resources to support remote English Language Arts/literacy and reading instruction, including lesson ideas and mobile apps for students and teachers.
- Curriculum Associates Free Downloadable Reading Packets
Printable at-home activity packs that are designed to provide students with valuable self-directed exercises and practice during extended absences from school. Each pack is designed to reinforce key concepts for a given grade. i-Ready’s engaging online lessons can support at-home learning.
- Myon
a student-centered, personalized literacy environment that gives students access to more than 6,000 enhanced digital books.
- Starfall Reading
a free public service to teach children to read. It includes language arts and mathematics for preschool, kindergarten, first grade, second grade, and third grade. Starfall emphasizes phonemic awareness, systematic sequential phonics, and common sight words in conjunction with audiovisual interactivity.
- Core Knowledge
provides open access to an exemplary curriculum for preschool through eighth grade.
- Open Culture
allows visitors to download hundreds of free audio books, mostly classics, to your MP3 player or computer. Below, you'll find great works of fiction
, poetry
, and non-fiction
, by such authors as Twain, Tolstoy, Hemingway, Orwell, Vonnegut, Nietzsche, Austen, Shakespeare, Asimov, HG Wells & more.
- Librivox - Free Public Domain Audiobooks
features recordings of books in the public domain
read by volunteers from around the world.
- CommonLit - Free reading passages
in all literacy and nonfiction genres for grades 3-12.
- ReadWriteThink Free Mobile Apps
helps students engage in literacy learning using tablet devices. No internet connection is required once the apps are downloaded. Offers resources for grade levels K-12.
- ReadWorks
, driven by cognitive science research, ReadWorks aims to create world-class content, teacher guidance, and integrated tools that improve teacher effectiveness and student achievement. They leverage cognitive-science research to create high-impact instructional materials and tools that are designed for immediate use within the practical realities of current U.S. classrooms.
Health – Comprehensive Sexual Health Education: The California Healthy Youth Act
Because the California Healthy Youth Act (CHYA) requires instruction to develop student's knowledge and skills, online instruction has not been previously considered for this type of instruction. In response to the closure of schools, every effort is being made by the CHYA curriculum providers to make instruction as interactive as possible. If your school district has purchased a CHYA compliant curriculum, please contact the publisher now for new online resources.
General guidelines for comprehensive sexual health education during distance learning:
- Be mindful of the surroundings in which comprehensive sexual health education will take place in the home
- If possible, watch privately or with a trusted adult
- If possible, use headphones and be discrete with the laptop screen
Free Resources:
Education Ttraining Resources
. This resource will help with the transition from in-person teaching and training to online design and delivery. Additional resources are embedded.
Education Training Resource Lessons
. These lessons from Health Smart for K-12 focus on hand washing, hygiene and general health. There are multiple lessons for each grade level.
Be Real. Be Ready
. San Francisco Unified School District’s comprehensive relationship and sexuality education curriculum designed for high school students. It is medically accurate; skills based; and LGBTQ inclusive that meets both the California Healthy Youth Act and the California State Health Education Content Standards.
For all other guidance regarding the California Healthy Youth Act, please see the California Department of Education website.
History and Social Science
Digital and online resources for teachers to develop lessons, locate primary and secondary source materials, and connect students with resources for research and inquiry-based lessons.
- Teaching Tolerance
provides free resources to educators—teachers, administrators, counselors and other practitioners—who work with children from kindergarten through high school. Educators use our materials to supplement the curriculum, to inform their practices, and to create civil and inclusive school communities where children are respected, valued and welcome participants.
- The Library of Congress
offers classroom materials and professional development to help teachers effectively use primary sources from the Library's vast digital collections in their teaching.
- The Stanford History Education Group
is an award-winning research and development group that seeks to improve education by conducting research, working with school districts, and reaching directly into classrooms with free materials for teachers and students. Their current work focuses on how young people evaluate online content. Their Civic Online Reasoning curriculum to help students develop the skills needed to navigate our current digital landscape.
- The Smithsonian
- Smithsonian Education
offers a wealth of resources and digital tools support inquiry-based learning and active engagement to spark creativity and curiosity.
- The Smithsonian Learning Lab
allows you to create personal collections and individualized educational experiences.
- The digital Game Center of the Smithsonian Science Education Center
offers fun experiences for the young STEM learner.
- Smithsonian's History Explorer
offers hundreds of free, innovative resources for learning about American history.
- Smithsonian Education
- Many museums, cultural sites, and historical sites offer virtual tours and livestreaming. Here are a few, but an internet search will reveal many others:
- Take a virtual tour of a California state park
.Thanks to a partnership between California State Parks and Google Maps, you can now visit many of our beautiful parks right from your computer, tablet or smart phone. A total of 110 state park destinations have been filmed using Google Trekker, a backpack-mounted camera that provides 360 degree footage.
- The Zinn Education Project
promotes and supports the teaching of people’s history in classrooms across the country. They aim to equip students with the analytical tools to make sense of and improve the world today. Their website offers free, downloadable lessons and articles organized by theme
, time period
, and grade level. The teaching materials emphasize the role of working people, women, people of color, and organized social movements in shaping history.
- World History For Us All
is a national collaboration of K-12 teachers, collegiate instructors, and educational technology specialists. This is a great site for middle and high school teachers to locate powerful, innovative model curriculum. World History for Us All helps students understand the past by connecting specific subject matter to larger historical patterns, and draws on up-to-date historical research.
- Teaching California
offers free online instructional materials to support the California History-Social Science Framework, with an emphasis on primary sources.
- The Content, Literacy, Inquiry, and Citizenship (CLIC) Project
offers resources for educators to take an inquiry-based approach to learning about various topics including Armenian Genocide, the Bracero Program, Environmental Literacy, and approaches to civic learning (Check with regional leads for additional resources available for online learning).
- California History-Social Science Project
provides professional learning and free resources such as The History Blueprint and The Source. See links to regional sites for additional information and support.
- BBC Bitesize History
Bitesize is the BBC's free online study support resource for school-age students in the United Kingdom. It is designed to aid students in both schoolwork and, for older students, exams.
- CrashCourse History Channel on YouTube
Crash Course believes that high quality educational videos should be available to everyone for free. The Crash Course team has produced more than 15 courses to date, and these videos accompany high school and college level classes ranging from the humanities to the sciences. Crash Course transforms the traditional textbook model by presenting information in a fast-paced format, enhancing the learning experience. With hundreds of millions of views on our YouTube channel, Crash Course has a worldwide audience in and out of classrooms. While the show is an immensely helpful tool for students and teachers, it also has a large viewership of casual learners who seek out online educational content independently. It has changed attitudes towards education by creating a community of learners who are looking for more than just help passing a test.
- Oyez
is a resource for teaching Supreme Court Cases that includes the case history, relevant precedent, arguments, and the Supreme Court Decision and applicable dissents.
- The National Archives
features a website that is easy to navigate and includes lots of teacher resources. They feature a daily historical document relating to an event from that day in history. The online catalog can be searched using keywords, and 100 "milestone" documents are identified as significant to American history.
- National Archives: Elementary School Distance Learning Programs
Free, interactive programs that feature primary sources from the Distance Learning Programs. Each program aligns with National Social Studies Standards and Common Core State Standards. It also provides teacher guides with pre- and post-program lessons.
- DocsTeach
is full of activities for educators. The documents are organized by different periods in American history. If you're teaching "Civil War and Reconstruction" or "Revolution and the New Nation," just click on the topic to find hundreds of primary source documents. DocsTeach provides audio, video, charts, graphs, maps and more.
- Spartacus Educational
is a resource for global history. It contains free encyclopedia entries that directly connect to primary source documents, making it a useful tool for educators looking to give students a starting point in their research.
- Fordham University
is another resource for global history. It organizes primary sources into periods of American history, from the "Reformation" to "Post-World War II Religious Thought." Teachers can find full texts available from Fordham or similar institutions appropriate for the middle school and high school classroom.
- Broken down by time period then listed in alphabetical order, the Avalon Project at Yale University
offers primary sources for global history teachers. This database starts with ancient and medieval documents and moves into present times. In addition to categories that address specific historical periods, the Avalon Project includes links to human rights documents as part of Project Diana
.
- USHistory.org
Free Online Textbooks provides high school courses for students, teachers, home-schoolers, and history lovers.
- Google and Life Magazine
have a search engine that lets users search millions of images from the Life Magazine Photo Archive. Users can type in key terms to guide their searches, look through images organized by decade (1860s through 1970s), or significant people, places, events or sports topics.
Mathematics
Online and digital resources for math instruction, assessment, and independent practice, including tutorials and videos.
- Curriculum Associates Free Downloadable Math Packets
Printable at-home activity packs designed to provide students with valuable self-directed exercises and practice during extended absences from school. Each pack is designed to reinforce key concepts for a given grade.
- PhET Simulations
support math and science learning.
- Zearn
is offering their entire K-5 curriculum - including 400 hours of digital lessons with on-screen teachers and supportive remediation.
- Eureka Math
offers its curriculum as PDF downloads for free, non-commercial use. The curriculum is accompanied by a selection of instructional materials and support resources for teachers at no additional cost.
- National Council of Teachers of Mathematics
provides access quality standards-based resources for teaching and learning mathematics, including interactive tools for students and instructional support for teachers. Lessons and activities on Illuminations align with NCTM's Principles and Standards for School Mathematics and the Common Core State Standards.
- Illustrated Mathematics Free Educational Resources and Videos
- California Partnership for Math and Science Education (CAPMSE) K-8 Math and Science Repository
The Repository is a resource for educators to design meaningful instruction in remote, hybrid, or in-person environments. The Repository offers ready-to-use lessons, a distance learning framework, non-digital supports for students, supports for leveraging technology, guidance on how to use Universal Design for Learning in conjustion with the lessons, SEL supports, and English learner supports.
Physical Education
Resources to promote and maintain physical education curricula in distance-learning environments. Many of these resources are designed for students who are homeschooled but could be used or adapted for use in a distance-learning environment.
- Shape America
provides tips for creating distance learning that include resources to promote and track physical activity.
- Six Apps to Kickstart Your PE Classroom and Keep Kids Motivated
lists apps students can use at home to track and plan fitness.
- PE Central’s Web Sites for Kids
provides links to resources to support remote and home instruction for physical education.
- The article Online Physical Education for Homeschoolers
provides guidance and resources for teaching P.E. remotely and at home.
- PBS Learning
provides resources for Health and Physical Education.
Science
Online and digital resources for science instruction, including tutorials, videos, and online labs.
- PhET Simulations
support math and science learning.
- Legends of Learning
provides educational games for grades 3–8. These resources have been made available for free due to school closures.
- National Science Teaching Association
contains resources from NSTA to help you support your child's learning in science at home and at school.
- California Science Teachers Association Resources
is a collection of resources for educators curated by CSTA.
- MysteryScience
has made their resources free in response to the Coronavirus.
- NASA Education Resources
(searchable by topic) provides informative educational materials that engage student interest in science, technology, engineering and mathematics.
- Teach Engineering
- This collection aligns with state and/or national science, mathematics and technology educational standards, and uses engineering as the vehicle to integrate science and mathematics concepts for K-12 students.
- US Department of Energy Education Resources
is a partnership between the US Department of Energy partnered with the National Energy Education Development Project (NEED) to create free energy education resources for classroom and educational use.
- The Physics Classroom
is a collection of online tutorials, concept builders, and interactive lessons for students.
- Edutopia: Ten Websites for Science Teachers
offers summaries and links to ten websites covering topics such as the process of science, field research journals, evolution, PhET simulations, Earth exploration, EdHead interactives, plants, chemistry, scientists, and more.
- California Academy of Sciences Educator Resources
provides lesson plans, science videos, and distance learning programs.
- Bill Nye The Science Guy
offers a collection of episode guides and videos as well as directions for home demos that can be found under the “Learn” section and cover topics such as life science, physical science, and planetary science.
- Discovery Education
is an online K-12 learning platform. It provides multimedia, virtual activities and hands-on labs with model lessons in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics.
- Switcheroo Zoo
helps kids learn about animals by playing games.
- Californians Dedicated to Education Foundation is hosting a Lunch Bites
webinar series that aims to provide short sessions that provide tangible tools you can immediately use to provide online instruction.
- California Partnership for Math and Science Education (CAPMSE) K-8 Math and Science Repository
The Repository is a resource for educators to design meaningful instruction in remote, hybrid, or in-person environments. The Repository offers ready-to-use lessons, a distance learning framework, non-digital supports for students, supports for leveraging technology, guidance on how to use Universal Design for Learning in conjustion with the lessons, SEL supports, and English learner supports.
World Languages
Online resources to support remote world languages instruction.
- The Occidental College World Language Project has created a series of web pages to meet the needs of world language teachers who now teach online and need diverse instructional technology tools. These tools, and corresponding guidance, are organized into five sections:
- Resources in Response to Covid-19– The American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL)has posted a collection of webinars on topics specific to the transition to online/distance teaching. They are also making available free access to eight Virtual Learning Modules
through June 30, 2020.
- PBS Learning Media provides resources and activities for
Writing
Online and digital resources to promote student engagement though creative writing and writing prompts. This list also includes resources for students working on sustained academic writing, including research.
- Scholastic Story Starters
is a creative writing prompt generator for children in grades K-6.
- Independent Reading Response Ideas
(PDF) is a 2-page document with Independent Reading Response Questions.
- The Learning Network (New York Times)
Each week the Learning Network offers new ways for students to practice reading, writing, and thinking using Times journalism – at no charge. Daily writing prompts for students to respond to are provided, as well as other activities for students, as well as resources for teachers.
- StoryBird
is a storytelling platform to help students develop their writing.
- Purdue Online Writing Lab
provides guidance for students writing academic papers, including guides for formatting, citations, analysis, and revising work.
Career Technical Education
Online resources to support remote Career Technical Education (CTE) instruction.
- The Career and College Transition Division has collected links to distance learning resources that can assist educators with providing support with Career Technical Education (CTE) curriculum and lessons for teachers and administrators. For the latest information and resources regarding CTE from the California Department of Education, including distance learning, please visit the CTE Distance Learning Website.
Pre-K Learning, Games, and Activities
Free and open-source resources and guidance for fostering early childhood/pre-k learning at home.
- Crafting and Art Activities by Happy Hooligans
is a popular Canadian blog that features crafts and activities for preschoolers.
- US Department of Education Early Childhood Learning Resources
includes guidance for parents and families to help them support pre-k learning and development.
- PBS Kids Games
provides fun, engaging games that foster learning, movement, social-emotional development, collaboration, and creativity.
- Stream Sesame Street
- PBS Learning for Preschoolers
offers lessons, interactives, audio, and websites to foster preschool learning and development.
- TeacherVision
provides free resources for pre-k in multiple subject areas and for many areas of interest, including art and music.
Current Events and News Outlets for Students
Digital and online resources that provide student-friendly access to current events. Some of these resources also provide reading guides, quizzes, and activities to support student learning.
- Newsela
has made access to their full suite of products free for teachers through the end of this year to assist with their learning continuity plans. They are also offering frequent professional learning resources to help them develop their mastery of distance learning techniques. Newsela has also created this guide
for planning for remote instruction.
- Edutopia: 6 Lesson Plans for Teaching Women's History Month
(article with digital resources) George Lucas Educational Foundation offers free and easy-to-implement classroom resources to celebrate Women’s History Month in March.
- Common Sense Media: Best News Websites for Kids
is great website for kids. The editors have made it easy with their hand-picked lists of fun, age-appropriate kids' sites and online games. It's a big world on the web, but with lists like theirs, it can be a worthwhile one for your kids.
- Edutopia
suggests six online resources for primary sources which allow students to read closely, make inferences, cite evidence, analyze arguments and interpret words and phrases as they are used in a text.
Free Educational Resources for Distance Learning
We are providing a list of publishers offering free distance learning resources. At the links listed, users can learn about the specific resources available as publishers continue to expand their offerings. In this list below, educators and parents/guardians may discover the individual resources they want for a particular need.
Articles to Navigate Distance Learning
These articles that provide guidance on developing distance learning lessons and units as well as advice specifically related to moving to online instruction as a result of the coronavirus
- Focusing on the Three Rs this Summer
Relationships, Routines, and Resiliency.
- Edutopia: OER (Open Education Resources) Roundup
is an educators’ guide to open educational resources with information about online repositories, curriculum-sharing websites, and sources for lesson plans and activities.
- Edutopia: What Teachers in China Have Learned in the Past Month
- Edutopia: Free Is Good - Open Educational Resources
- Edutopia: Teaching with Web-Based Resources
- Edutopia: Harnessing the Power of YouTube in the Classroom
- The EduBlogger:
Navigate from Kathleen Morris to find information on ways to structure daily instruction, ways video is incorporated throughout the day, timetables, and ways to plan an online lesson. It includes links to Tools for synchronous (live) video conferences, recording asynchronous videos and screencasts.
- The American Federation of Teachers’
offers a Checklist for Distance Learning Questions You Should Ask Now includes specific questions districts must ask themselves regarding how English language learners and students with disabilities will be supported.
Supporting Students with Disabilities in Distance Learning
Resources to help support students with disabilities complete tasks and assignments and adjust to new routines in the transition to distance learning.
- Top 12 Websites for Children With Learning Disabilities
- Can Do! Kids!
provides resources for helping students focus on the skills and strengths they possess through guided self-assessments
- AdaptiveWorksheets
allows parents and teachers to create their own worksheets or print existing worksheets but does have a collection of free resources
.
- The Special Student Services Blog by Juanita Pritchard
provides guidance for supporting students with significant cognitive disabilities who have been classified as moderate/severe/profound.