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 Part 2 — From Screen to Fridge
the Snow Day Survival Series In Part 4.1, we made a dragon Taking a shower. One card. Just to see how the Flash Card Creator works. But one card doesn’t…
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…
The Plan Said: Build a Visual Schedule
In Part 1, we built a behavior intervention plan for a 6-year-old with autism stuck inside on a snow day. The plan recommended one thing above all else: a structured…
Social Stories for Making Friends: A Real Autism Success
If you read our last blog, you know we’ve been on a journey. I left my daughter playing ping pong with kids at her after-school program — but she told…
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…
How Phonics Lab Helps Kids With Dyslexia Hear Sounds Clearly
If your child struggles to hear the difference between similar sounds—like “b” and “d” or “ship” and “chip”—reading becomes so much harder. That’s where Phonics Lab comes in. This tool…
The Invisible Report Card: When Academic Progress Isn’t Enough.
One mom’s journey with autism, social stories, and the words her daughter finally found My daughter is finally reading at grade level. After months of working with EZRead tools, her…
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…
