Activities with visual support for autistic kids

Activities with visual support for autistic kids

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Hi! This page is designed to parents and teachers whose children and students are visual learners.

Photos from Activities with visual support for autistic kids's post 05/11/2026
05/10/2026

For a long time, when people asked me if I was accepting new clients, my answer was always: NO 😊

But now, I’m finally ready to open a few spots for new families in Montreal and surrounding areas.

I work with children with autism spectrum disorder and other developmental differences. I completed the Autism Spectrum Disorder program at Champlain College and focus primarily on communication development — both verbal and non-verbal.

What I can help with:
- Developing communication skills at home and in everyday life
- Teaching parents practical strategies they can use daily
- Creating visual supports adapted specifically for your child (included in the session)
- Encouraging independence and functional communication
- Activities based on the child’s interests and strengths
- Homework and practice activities if parents would like them

I can work in English, French, and Russian.

Sessions are personalized and adapted to each child’s level, interests, and needs. I especially enjoy creating custom visual materials and practical supports that families can actually use in real life.

Located on the South Shore / Montreal area

If you think I could help your child, feel free to message me privately ❤️

Photos from Activities with visual support for autistic kids's post 12/01/2025

Who?

Photos from Activities with visual support for autistic kids's post 11/22/2025

Getting dressed (s'habiller)

Photos from Activities with visual support for autistic kids's post 10/26/2025

Life skills:
- Sweeping the floor;
- Vacuuming the floor;
- Charging the dishwashing machine;
- Throwing out the garbage.

Photos from Activities with visual support for autistic kids's post 10/17/2025

A fun way to build social thinking and visual reasoning skills!

This engaging visual activity helps children understand perspective-taking — the ability to recognize that others can see and experience things differently than we do.

Why Teaching Perspective Is Important

Perspective-taking is an essential foundation for:

Social cognition — understanding that everyone has their own thoughts and perceptions
Language and communication — using expressions like “He sees…”, “From her side…”
Problem solving and empathy — recognizing that others may see or think differently
Visual-spatial reasoning — developing the ability to mentally shift viewpoints
These skills are especially valuable for children with autism spectrum disorder, language delays, or social-emotional learning goals, but enjoyable and educational for all learners!

What’s Included

4 main point-of-view illustrations (each showing what one animal sees)
Multiple “fausse” (incorrect or tricky) images designed to confuse and challenge the child in a playful way
Clear, consistent visual style — same table, same characters, same perspective level
Ideal for both individual learning and small-group discussions
How to Use

Ask questions like “What does the cat see?”
Encourage students to justify their answers
Mix in the fausse pictures to make learners think twice — perfect for turn-taking, laughter, and critical thinking!
Perfect For

Speech-language therapy
Social skills groups
Special education classrooms
Early learning and cognitive development
Home activities with parents or caregivers
What Makes This Activity Special

Every image is carefully designed to be visually clear, culturally neutral, and engaging for children. The inclusion of funny, false perspective pictures keeps learners alert, promotes reasoning, and turns learning into a game!

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Montreal, QC