Super Duper Favorites
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Flamingo Bingo
Flamingo Bingo is one of my absolute favorite games for teaching prepositions in speech therapy because it works beautifully for both receptive and expressive language goals. I love starting by teaching concepts like in, on, and under using the flamingo figurine around the therapy room, then checking comprehension with movement-based directions before transitioning into the bingo game itself. The visuals are clear and engaging, making it perfect for both readers and non-readers while keeping practice fun and interactive.

Chipper Chat
Chipper Chat was one of my most-used therapy games because kids are instantly motivated by the magnetic wand and metallic chips. I love that the picture scenes can be used with readers and non-readers alike, and because the cards themselves aren’t text-dependent, it’s easy to use with my Spanish-speaking students by simply asking the questions in Spanish. You can target skills ranging from identifying objects and actions all the way up to answering more complex WH-questions and language prompts, making it incredibly easy to differentiate across levels.

Photo Fish
Photo Fish was always a huge hit in my therapy room because I have yet to meet a child who isn’t completely mesmerized by a magnetic fishing game. The adorable foam fish and fishing rods instantly make therapy feel like play, while the action photos provide an engaging way to target verbs, vocabulary, and sentence expansion. I also love taping articulation targets onto the fish so I can easily adapt the game for speech sound practice and mixed groups.
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Super Duper sells this game for verbs and classifying, They also sell blank magnetic fish and
Seasonal Game Boards
These seasonal blank game boards are some of my favorite open-ended therapy materials because they can be adapted for almost any goal. I love pairing them with my Spanish-English cognate lists from my TPT store to target articulation and vocabulary in both English and Spanish, but they also work great with dry erase markers, picture cards, or taped-on targets for virtually any concept you’re working on. The seasonal themes keep therapy fun and motivating all year long.
Understanding Negation
These Understanding Negation cards are one of my favorite tools for targeting concepts like not, don’t, and doesn’t in a structured, visual way. I love pairing them with repetitive games like Candy Land or Don’t Break the Ice to keep practice engaging while giving students lots of opportunities to hear and use negation naturally. The activities start with simple fields of two and gradually increase in difficulty, making them especially helpful for younger students or children who missed negation items on the PLS.
Spanish Early Classifying
MagneTalk Spanish Early Classifying is a good resources for teaching young children how to sort and group items by category in a hands-on, visual way. The 70 magnetic photo tiles are easy to manipulate while targeting categories like food, animals, clothing, transportation, and household items. Some vocabulary may be unfamiliar for certain bilingual learners depending on their country of origin, but I really appreciate that the resource uses real photographs, which provides strong visual support for early language learners.

Photo Cards
The Webber Photo Cards are incredibly versatile for targeting vocabulary in both English and Spanish. Because the cards use real photographs and don’t include printed words, they work beautifully with bilingual learners, and since each image is printed twice, they’re perfect for interactive games like Go Fish, Memory, matching, and so much more. Super Duper sells a deck for animals, occupations, actions, emotions, food, and around the home.
Card Garage
The Fun Deck Parking Garage is the perfect way to organize and store all of your therapy card decks in one place. I loved these so much that I had four stacked in my old office, and they worked great for both Super Duper decks and other therapy cards. I also love that Super Duper sells empty metal tins separately, making it easy to create and organize your own custom card sets.
Magnetic Wands
On a budget? These magnetic wands are hands-down one of the most versatile tools in my therapy room for just a little over $10. Kids are suddenly motivated to participate when they get to use the “magic wand,” making this a 10/10 addition to any SLP toolbox!





