| Have your kid make them over the snow days. |
| great idea! |
| Wish i'd seen this yesterday |
Make them! Paint plain paper, or use construction paper. Look up instructions for origami, find printables online. |
| More snow this weekend- order on amazon now |
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OMG. I remember what a nightmare that was, with my low processing, dysgraphic son. We did it one year, and then switched to unsigned, unnamed little trinket cards.
If your child is not up for it, don't torture them. |
They dont need to sign anything. Just doodle or cut, etc. |
| There are plenty of good online shopping options for Valentines. I wouldn't risk going out onto unplowed roads to get Valentines now, when they can be delivered to you in a few days. |
I must have missed the part on this thread that said "torture your child with dysgraphia." Not everything is meant as a threat to your son with a very specific set of needs (fwiw I also have a kid with dysgraphia and found that valentines were a good way to practice writing skills in a low pressure way.) |
The OP write this before the storm. |
| Here's another unhinged plan-in-advance tip. I have my DD write out thank you notes for her birthday party gifts over the course of a few weekends, a few at a time, right before the party. Then all she has to do is leave a blank -- "Thank you so much for the ____" to fill in later. She just fills each one in as she opens their present once home from the party. This saves a lot of time because she likes to personalize each card, draw pictures on them, etc. |
oink |
| We made marbled paper prints with shaving cream and liquid water colors. We will make the paper into valentines. |
We spent a huge amount of time getting our dysgraphic kid to do this kind of stuff, which is one of the reasons he's progressed as far as he has: bad, but normal bad. |