Best Printables for Teachers (Classroom-Ready Tools)
Teachers don't need more curriculum. They need tools that work when a kid is dysregulated, when the schedule changes, when the routine breaks. These printables are designed to work in a classroom without district approval, professional development, or training.
The 5 Tools That Make the Biggest Difference
Five classroom-ready printable systems:
Visual Schedule
A set of printable picture cards arranged in order to show your child what is happening or what comes next. Kids under 8 typically hold only 1-2 verbal instructions in working memory at a time. A visual schedule turns invisible verbal steps into something they can scan and follow.
Best for: morning chaos, bedtime battles, transition meltdowns, and any routine your child resists.
Get the Visual Schedule printable →
Calm Down Corner
A small dedicated physical space in your home where children can go to process big feelings using sensory tools, visual supports, and breathing exercises. Children regulate through their bodies before their brains. A defined small space with sensory tools gives the nervous system somewhere to land while big feelings pass.
Best for: meltdowns, big feelings, anxiety spikes, and overstimulation.
Get the Calm Down Corner printable →
Chore Chart
A printable visual list of household tasks your child is expected to complete, tracked daily or weekly. A chart removes the daily power struggle by externalizing the reminder. Instead of you nagging, the chart nags. Kids check the board, not you.
Best for: constant reminders, kids forgetting tasks, and the daily fight about responsibilities.
Get the Chore Chart printable →
Screen Time Reset
A structured 7-day plan with daily steps, family agreements, and replacement activities to reduce screen time without cold turkey battles. Going cold turkey on screens triggers withdrawal. A gradual reset lowers the dopamine load and teaches your child to recognize their own urge for screens.
Best for: screen addiction, post-holiday digital drift, constant iPad battles.
Get the Screen Time Reset printable →
Screen-Free Activity Cards
A set of printable activity cards your child picks from when they say 'i'm bored', organized by time, type, and setting. Boredom is good for kids, but a screen-trained brain needs a launch pad. Activity cards give them a menu they can pick from on their own, restoring autonomy.
Best for: constant 'I'm bored' complaints, screen-time creep, summer break monotony.
Get the Screen-Free Activity Cards printable →
Or get all 5 in one bundle
The Calm Family Library bundle includes all 5 printable workbooks at a discount versus buying separately. 210+ pages total. Built by an autism mom for her own family first.
Shop the bundle (code LIBRARY20) Or on EtsyThe Bottom Line
You don't need every tool here. Start with the one that solves your hardest moment of the week. Add another in 3-4 weeks once the first is locked in. The compound effect of a few good systems is what changes the household.