Chore Chart for Occupational Therapists

A chore chart works for occupational therapists for the same reasons it works at home, plus a few audience-specific advantages.

Why Occupational Therapists Specifically Benefit From a Chore Chart

OTs working with pediatric clients use visual supports as a first-line intervention for sensory regulation, executive function, and self-regulation goals. These printables are designed around the same co-regulation and sensory integration principles you already teach.

How to Use It as a Occupational Therapist

Use in clinic for in-session work, send copies home with parents for generalization, integrate into your sensory diet protocols. Bills nothing extra.

What Makes This Different From Generic Printables

Designed by an autism mom who used these with her own son alongside OT recommendations. Aligned with The Whole-Brain Child, polyvagal theory, and sensory integration practice. A chart removes the daily power struggle by externalizing the reminder. Instead of you nagging, the chart nags. Kids check the board, not you.

Setup Steps

  1. Print the materials on cardstock for durability
  2. Laminate if you'll be using them long-term or with multiple children
  3. Stick them where the routine/regulation happens (door, wall, kitchen area)
  4. Walk children through them when calm, not during a moment of need
  5. Step back and let the visual do the work, point at the chart instead of giving verbal reminders

The Chore Chart printable, ready to download

Our printable Chore Chart Workbook works for occupational therapists just as well as for home parents. Same materials, designed by an autism mom for her own son first, refined for every family and professional who has used them.

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The Bottom Line

Chore Charts aren't just for home use. Occupational Therapists using these tools see the same compound benefits home families see, often faster because of the daily repetition.