A parent’s honest walkthrough of EZducate’s Behavior Intervention Plan tool My 14-year-old daughter refused to make friends at school. For years. Then we started using social stories. We practiced. We…
Dragon Day Flash Cards — Because Why Not?
Part 4 of the Snow Day Survival Series In Parts 1-3, we built a behavior plan, a visual schedule, and two social stories. The visual schedule had two flashcard activities:…
As Promised: The Snow Day Social Story
I said I’d come back with the original story — the one I started before my daughter needed me. Here it is. Same 6 steps. But this time: Reading Level…
When Plans Change — A Social Story for That
Part 3 of the Snow Day Survival Series In Part 1, we built a behavior intervention plan. In Part 2, we turned it into a visual schedule. The schedule included…
Social Story for Kids: Understanding Emotions and Friendship Skills
A parent’s journey through the small victories that add up to real connection If you’ve been following our story, you know making friends hasn’t come easy for my daughter. A…
Week 4 Can Wait: How a Social Story Saved Our Urgent Care Visit
She brought me water. Checked on me. Said, “Mommy, I’m taking care of you because you took care of me.” That’s empathy. Real empathy. It reminded me that all the…
Vocabulary Practice: Finally, a Way for Words to Actually Stick
“Mom, I read all the words. But I don’t know what it means.” If you’ve heard this, you know the gut punch. Your child can sound out every word perfectly—but…
How to Create Holiday Social Stories in Minutes
A simple step-by-step guide for busy parents If you’re a parent of a child with autism, ADHD, or sensory sensitivities, you know the holidays can be overwhelming. Crowded malls, long…
Week 2: Breaking Down Words in the Morphology Builder
A Step-by-Step Look at How My Daughter Mastered Her Week 1 Vocabulary Last week, my daughter started EZRead’s AI Learning Path and picked vocabulary as one of her focus areas….
Beyond Reading Intervention: The Moment I Let My Daughter Lead
Tell me something is impossible and I’ll show you it’s not. That’s who I am. Always have been. When my daughter was diagnosed, I made a choice. I gave up…
