Strategy Match
What would you baseline?
Make a Case
What's Wrong Here?
Access or Barrier?
100

Maya misses multi-step directions during circle time. What is one strategy you could use?

Chunk Directions, visual supports

100

Maya's Caregiver: “She guesses a lot when we tell her things to do.”

Following directions accuracy

100

Maya struggles in whole group instruction- what could you advocate for? 

Small group instruction, accommodations

100

Teacher says: “Just repeat directions louder for Maya.”

Volume does not equal access

100

Teacher gives directions while facing the boar

Barrier — no visual/auditory clarity

200

Jordan is in a heavy class with little visual supports- what is one strategy you could use?

Pre-teach vocab, visual notes

200

Jordan Reads below grade level.

ASL vs English proficiency gap, vocabulary, 

200

Jordan is missing key instruction in class. What could you make a case for?

visual instruction, visual access, TOD support

200

“Jordan has an interpreter, so he’s fine.”

Access is not guaranteed comprehension

200

Interpreter is present, but teacher speaks rapidly with no pauses.

Barrier — limits processing and interpretation quality

300

Luis doesn't respond consistently to spoken language. What is one strategy you could use?

Multi modal communication, modeling, labeling

300

Luis has no clear communication system

Current expressive/receptive communication (ASL, English, or Spanish)

300

Luis has no formal language support or system. What would you make a case for?

Intensive language intervention

300

Luis is only given speech therapy

Ignores need for full language access

300

Visual schedule is provided AND reviewed before transitions.

Access — supports predictability and comprehension

400

Avery becomes upset when schedule changes unexpectedly. What is one strategy you could use?

Tactile or object schedule, preview changes, explain changes

400

Avery only communicates with familiar adults

Communication across partners

400

Avery needs consistent communication access. What would you make a case for?

Deaf blind support, 1:1 services, access to a DB intervener

400

Avery’s schedule changes without warning.

No predictable communication support

400

Sam is expected to listen all day without breaks.

Barrier — listening fatigue reduces access

500
Sam stops participating by the afternoon. His head hurts. What is one strategy you could use?

Listening breaks, reduce auditory load

500

Sam has strong decoding but weak comprehension

Comprehension vs decoding discrepancy

500

Sam's fatigue impacts his learning. What could you advocate for?

accommodations, reduced auditory demand

500

Sam is expected to listen all day with no supports.

Ignores listening fatigue

500

Luis is encouraged to use gestures, visuals, and emerging signs.

Access — supports language development across modalities