The Top 5 Easiest (FREE) Apps to Use With Trial Teaching

free easy apps for discrete trial or small group teaching

Do you use Apps for Trial Teaching?

If you work in early childhood or special education classrooms, you have probably heard of “discrete trial teaching”. Regardless of your views on the topic, trial teaching has been proven to help students both retain and learn new information, especially specific and concrete things like colors, numbers, shapes, and letters. 

But running a trial center can become repetitive. There are only so many times your kids will want to see colors and numbers on flashcards. So how can you make learning this information fun for your students? Enter technology.

If you are blessed with a tech-heavy classroom or barely has an iPad to its name, there are so many fun options to incorporate and ‘jazz-up’ your trial teaching program. Here are some easy and FREE apps for your phone or iPad to get you started running an exciting trial center in your classroom. 

 Colors & Shapes – Learn Color 

By RV AppStudios LLC

In this free and fun game from RV AppStudios, kids can match shapes to shadows, pick colors from a field of 3, or trace outlines. Run a center by playing “Color Pop”, having your student find the target color by popping the target color balloon as they float by on the screen. Or for a more complex task, have students match household items with similar colors. Adorable graphics, motivational phrases and feedback, and no Ads! You can’t ask for much more in an educational app! 

Math Kids- Add, Subtract, Count

By RV App Studios

Okay- you can see I have a very loving relationship with RV AppStudios! I am all for the ad-less and totally free simple math games that keep kids engaged.  Begin with a simple counting activity or move to add or subtract pictures of cute objects.  Lucas the Lion is back to give students encouraging words and feedback when they get the correct answer. My teacher favorite? No annoying buzzer noise when they get the answer wrong that can accidentally become a reinforcer. 

Music Color

By SoundTouch Interactive

This adorable app by SoundTouch Interactive combines easy touch, vibrant colors and images, and classical music for a beautiful experience. This free app has no ads (swoon) and while designed for free touch and exploration by children, also has an option in each color for a ‘find the color’ game from a field of 4. In my classroom, we also used this in our speech and language center to work on expanding sentence length and vocabulary. Have a child choose an image from each color and describe what they see. Instead of saying “I see ball.” they could expand to “I see a blue ball”. 

Sightwords

By eFlashApps

Nothing flashy here, and that’s why it’s gold. You have to suffer through a few banner ads but nothing too distracting. The sight words that they use are common Fry words and are sorted by Pre-Primer, Primer, K through to 6th grade. In my classroom, we used this app to run sight word trial practice. Students would choose to complete 10 or 15 words for a reward. Cute graphics and the ability to turn voice and music on and off help turn this app into a solid teaching tool. 

Sort It Out

By MyFirstApp Ltd.

This app is great for practicing sorting by category, students can place items by dragging and dropping them where they belong (Cars go on streets, boats go in the water, etc). Run trials by asking the child “Where does an Airplane go?” and having them drag it to the correct place. Downside: the full version will cost you a few bucks. 

 

In a post-Covid world, the data is in. Technology is essential in any classroom. Both students and teachers can benefit from adding fun and enjoyable apps to your classroom routine. If you run a classroom that is strong on routines and small group centers, these apps for trial teaching can help students with the potential boredom as the mid-year slump of the routine sets in. 

Do you have any go-to apps you love for your class? Drop a recommendation below!

 

Time-Filler Educational and Movement Games

Have you ever been at the end of your lesson and realized that you still had 10 minutes left in your period?

Have you ever been teaching and realized that your kids are basically sleeping, and you really can’t blame them….

Then it’s time for a game!

I call them “time-fillers” but in reality *most* are educational and can relate to what you are currently teaching. Here are a few that I have used this year. Some of them I made up, some a took from Drama class and some were modified from random items found online!

ABC Yoga Stretch
Use whenever your kids are nodding off- have them all stand with space between them. Have a child chose a letter and then have all of the kids attempt to create the letter with their bodies.  Another option is to create a team of 2 students and then have them race to create each letter using both of them before the other teams!

Animal Imagery
A basic game we did this week while practicing imagery for our Poetry Unit. We sat in a circle and one student thought of an animal. They had to describe the animal using only description and the 5 senses (what does it say, smell like, look like etc). Can be made more difficult using different animals or different types of descriptors, but we just did a basic one.

I Spy Imagery
Basically the same as the above game but using the game “I Spy” and the five senses. So instead of saying “I spy something green”, you can say “I spy something that feels rough” Or I spy something that would taste like wood”. Practice Imagery and observational skills.

Vocab Pic-tionary
We did this game to help us practice our vocabulary words with visuals. I gathered the kids into teams of 2 and gave them each a mini-whiteboard and a pen. They each were assigned 1 vocabulary word and had to come up with a drawing to represent it. Other teams would try to guess the word based on the picture. Points and Prizes optional!

Math Relay Race
I am fortunate enough to have a little ‘backyard break area’ behind my classroom. I set up a few obstacles like ‘stand on one foot for 10 seconds’ then balance a cone on your head for 10 seconds, etc. Once they got to the end, they had to solve a review math problem then run back to their line and then their teammate would go. The first team to solve all of their math problems wins!

Zip Zap Zop
This is a game I learned in my ‘teaching drama to elementary students’ class at CSUS. You can use a ball or just pointing (its easier to use a tangible thing for lower functioning students). You can begin by just saying Zip-Zap-Zop in order as you go around so students get the hang of it. Once they get used to the words you can create new rules such as ‘if you say Zip, you go to the right, if you say Zop go back to the left’. Be creative, the more rules the more difficult to follow, and the more fun to mess up! Practice processing and attention skills.

Fact/Opinion
Used to practice the difference between Facts and Opinions- Give each child a card that says fact or opinion on it. Have a list of mixed factual and opinion statements. Read them off to the students and when the students think they know whether or not it is fact or opinion, the put their card up on their forehead (facing forward so no other students can use their answers). You can use points, prizes, etc. The speedier it gets, the more fun!

Question Ball
A social skills game to practice asking interesting questions of others, as well as being interested in their responses and remaining in eye contact. The person who starts says a name, makes eye contact, asks a question, then throws the ball. The other student catches the ball, answers the question, and then asks a new question of another student. Going around until time is up!

1 Sentence Story
We did this during our fictional story writing/descriptive word unit and the kids loooved it.  We sat in a circle and I began a simple story (eg: Once upon a time, there was a princess named Rebecca). The next person in the circle had to say the next sentence in the story. We added rules as we practiced the game such as you must follow the story line, set up a plot action/solution, and conclusion, etc. I would give a time limit and they were ‘responsible’ for finishing their story by then. I could take notes on a white board to keep track of characters/plot and then read it back to them at the end to see if they had made any sense. Working together/group skills as well as story elements/plot building and description skills!

Debate/Rotate
We had this game out of the blue one day and they actually really liked it. It fit perfectly into our persuasive writing unit.  We began with a spin off of a ‘unity building activity’ our school gave us about setting boundaries. Rules were stated to the children such as “You have to turn off your phone by 10pm each night” and the students would align themselves next to signs that read “Fair” “Extreme” or “unsure”.  We took this one step further and I would pick one student from the “fair” and “extreme” group and have them explain in one sentence why their position was right. They like this so much that we came up with new ‘rules’ and even had the students come up with their own scenarios to debate.

Rock/Paper/Scissors Full Body
Basically the same as rock paper scissors. You do this as a full body game ‘versus’ the teacher. Have everyone turn their back to you (Or you turn your back). On the count of three have the turned away group jump back around and into a position of rock (holding knees on ground), paper (standing stick straight like a board), or scissors (arms and legs out like an X). You will be in a position too. Whoever you ‘beat’ has to sit down. The rest of the class continues to play until you have one winner or everyone is out. A fun movement time-filler.

Don’t Match Me- Animals
Similar to the rock/paper/scissors- pick three animals that are easy to act out. We chose tiger, elephant, and shark. Similar to the above game, face opposite directions, turn on count of 3 and make an animal! The goal is NOT to match the teacher. If they match the teacher, there is ‘turf war’ and the teacher always wins, so they are out. Good for imagination and as a movement game.

There are so many more out there, even books on this subject! But these are just a few that have been ‘tried and tested and loved’ by my fabulous students.