- This kitchen safety story is an excellent conversation starter for discussing safety in the kitchen and around electrical appliances.
- The story describes a situation in which Brian attempts to retrieve toast from the toaster with a metal fork. Brianna intervenes to teach him about proper safety measures.
- This special education resource emphasizes the importance of caution when using electrical appliances and provides tips for staying safe in the kitchen.
- This life and social skills story can be utilized as a supplement to a curriculum or as an independent resource.
- This worksheet contains step-by-step instructions, reading comprehension questions to reinforce learning and collect data, an answer key, age-appropriate graphics, real-world examples, and ideas for implementation.
Brian Learns Kitchen Appliance Safety Tips
Brian Learns Kitchen Appliance Safety Tips is a kitchen safety story designed to help middle and high school students improve independent living skills. Join Nelson in this no-prep special education worksheet as he learns kitchen appliance safety tips. Brianna explains the danger of using metal utensils to get toast out of the toaster and the risk of using electrical appliances near water. This kitchen safety story will engage your students through the power of storytelling, age-appropriate graphics, relatable dialog, and real-world scenarios.
Number of Pages: 5 File Format: PDF (color and black-and-white) Grade Levels: 7th – 12th, Adult Education, Homeschool
$1.99
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Why Use | This resource is designed to help teens and adults develop independent living skills in various settings, such as home, school, work, or the community. |
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Intended User | This life skills resource can be used by parents, caregivers, special education teachers, therapists, clinicians, and coaches to promote independence in teens and adults. |
Where to Use | This life skills resource is ideal for middle and high schools, at-home learning, life skills programs, one-on-one therapy, adult transition programs, social skills groups, adult day centers, and autism life skill centers. |
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