Looking for some visual recipes for snacks and lunches? Whether you cook in the classroom, homeschool or just want your kids to cook at home-check out this post! You will gain tons of visual recipe ideas for kids!
If you have followed me for long, you know how important teaching life skills are to me. Cooking is one of my absolute favorite life skills to teach. Whether you have students in elementary, middle, high school or older, teach them to independently make a snack or meal. This life skill will benefit them greatly in life. I cannot stress enough how important it is to cook in the classroom. I have created many visual recipes for special education over the years such as:
Advanced Cooking (Kitchen Needed)-Perfect for middle or high school!
Today, I want to share 25 Visual Recipes for Snacks and Lunches that do NOT require a stove or oven. ALL you need is a microwave and a refrigerator! A few recipes may use a toaster but no heavy duty kitchen appliances are needed.
Let’s chat really quick about HOW to set up cooking in your classroom for students. Follow the simple steps below for success!
1. Carve out time
First, pick a day of the week or time to do this in your special education classroom. When I was in the classroom, I loved having cooking group on Friday afternoons. It made it a “Fun Friday,” was easy for planning and gave us a treat to look forward to.
2. Identify student’s goals
Next, look at your student’s strengths and what goals they need to work on as far as independence goes. Do they need a lot of fine motor help? Will they have to use hand over hand support for each recipe? Do you need to start very basic with them such as pouring cereal? Are they older and need to learn how to work an oven?
3. Adaptive cooking tools
Most of these visual recipes are easy cooking recipes for kids. However, you may still need to invest in some adapted tools for cooking group. This will depend on your students’ needs.
4. Use visuals when cooking
Visuals, visuals, visuals….they are just so important in special education! Students LOVE and NEED visuals.
Some ideas for cooking group:
-Use social stories to discuss cooking and what the expectations are.
-Read books to build background knowledge on certain foods.
-Follow visual recipes so that students can be independent while cooking (even non-readers!)
25 Snack and Lunch Recipes for Students in Special Education
Do you love to cook with your kids but need SIMPLE recipes that do not require an oven or stove? The 25 Snack and Lunch Visual Recipes Bundle is exactly that! You may need a microwave or fridge. Some recipes could use a griddle, toaster oven, or mixer, but you could use the microwave for all. This set includes “real life” recipes that students will actually want to eat each day.
WHAT’S INCLUDED FOR EACH RECIPE?
– Visual Recipe
– Tools and Ingredients List
– Sequencing Page
– Survey (How was it? Did you like it?)
– Tools and Ingredients worksheet
Some favorite recipes are nachos and peanut butter fudge!
Let me know below-do you cook in your classroom? What questions do you have?
The post 25 Visual Recipes for Snacks and Lunches appeared first on Simply Special Ed.