Free Paper Fortune Tellers: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Games for Counseling and Classroom

Cognitive Behavioral Therapy Paper Game for Children

To download the PDF files for these three paper fortune tellers, click on the RED link right below here:

CBT Paper Fortune Tellers for Anxiety & Other Issues

Helping children to work on upsetting emotions using cognitive behavioral therapy game activities

Many young people have persistent problems with anxiety, sadness, anger and other upsetting emotions.  To maintain engagement in counseling and psycho-education, we need to provide novel approaches and introduce some levity whenever possible.

To check out a dozen other paper fortune tellers, on diverse social skills themes, please click here.

For a summary and links to all the free CBT materials on my website, please click here.

Some suggestions for introducing these  Fortune Tellers:

1.     Introduce some basics concerning the connection between automatic  negative thoughts and negative emotions.  I suggest you do this by viewing , with children, this very short video I made:

2.     Working in pairs, and taking turns, person number one says, “Spell your name.”  For each letter, the child holding the Fortune Teller manipulates the device back and forth.

3.     Person number two is then shown the two options appearing on the inner triangles.  Person one says, “Pick which one you want.”  You can see photos of this farther down on this page.

4.     Person one opens up the innermost petals, where four options appear.  He tells person two, “Pick A, B, C or D.” Person one reads the option selected.  If the option read is a negative thought, person two has to tell how to deal with such thoughts.  If the option selected is a positive thought, person two must describe a time when he needed to use such a thought to solve a problem.

I really enjoyed creating these paper devices.  Don’t be afraid to try folding them.  Here is an illustrated guide to folding them.

My best wishes for your work with children,

Joel Shaul, LCSW

paper fortune teller cognitive behavioral therapy children

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Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.

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The Conversation Train Book

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Fun, therapy and social – emotional skills teaching for children with ASD’s

Various materials for emotional learning
In this post, I provide some ideas on how to put together a kit of emotion face visuals, combining inexpensive resources with home made and free downloads.

Children with Asperger’s and other autism spectrum disorders may experience a number of problems involving emotions.  They may have difficulty recognizing and naming a nuanced range of emotions in themselves in themselves.  They can find it hard to accurately identify emotions in other people.  Kids on the autism spectrum may find it challenging to discern emotions in others through observation of facial expression and body posture.  Young people on the spectrum can find it bewildering to sort out what causes various emotions and how unpleasant emotions can be relieved.

In this blog post, I present a kit of visual and game resources I have put together for my own use in social skills therapy and social skills groups.  Some of this kit is available for free download elsewhere on my website (Emotion Question Cards).  Another part of this kit is available for purchase online at a ridiculously low price (Emotion eyes and mouth visuals).  The third part of the kit I put together using appealing emotion drawings found in a textbook on how to draw comics.

Although I designed this kit primarily to be used for kids with high functioning autism, the materials have many applications for children who don’t have autism.

Why to employ a game-like format when helping children on the autism spectrum with emotions

Many kids on the spectrum can spend years learning emotional regulation skills.  It can be tough going for them.  By the time you, as a teacher, SLP or mental health professional, are working with a child on these issues, the child may have already received a lot of teaching about emotions, much of it under very stressful circumstances.  It seems reasonable, and strategic, to lighten it up sometimes in social skills teaching.

Face and mouth photo visuals

These are available for orientaltrading.com for $5.25 a set!  I bought three sets for myself.

Here are some ways to use these.  I am sure you will think up a lot more.

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In the example above:  First the child matches up the various eyes with the various mouths.  Next, use my Emotion Question Cards (free download from another post:  click HERE).  This sets up a large variety of interesting and fun problem-solving game activities.  Here is another example below.

 

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Emotion Face Cards

I found a wonderful book that shows artists how to create comics.  Here is the book:

Image of Making Comics bookI found pages full of very appealing drawings rendering a range of emotions in six categories.  I extracted the images to create my own set of cards to use with my clients.

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Here is a close-up of a few of the cards.  I love the detail of the drawings.

IMG_0898Below is one example of how to use the Emotion Question Cards with the Emotion Face Cards.  There are many possibilities.

I hope you find these ideas helpful.  For more resources to help children with ASD to understand emotions and to cope with difficult emotions, follow this link HERE.

Joel Shaul, LCSW

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Paper Fortune Tellers – social skills games for children with ASD’s (and other children too)

This is the main page for my social skills paper fortune tellers. Scroll down to view photos.

Click on these links below for explanations and free downloads of 17 paper fortune tellers.

Quick Picture Guide for Folding Paper Fortune Tellers

Quick Picture Guide for Using These Paper Fortune Tellers in Social / Emotional Skills Work

*For a video demo on folding and using these things by Carla Butorac, SLP, click HERE.

Paper fortune tellers can be useful therapy / teaching tools, especially for young people with ASD.

*The turn-taking that naturally occurs when two people use a paper fortune teller promotes the reciprocal conversations we are trying to promote.

*Each paper fortune teller emphasizes an important skill area in our social/emotional teaching.

*Paper fortune tellers are engaging and fun.

I enjoyed creating these. I hope you find them useful.

Joel Shaul

Paper Fortune Teller for Playing & Hanging Out Skills

Himmel und Hölle um spielen und einander kennenzulernen

Adivinador de papel para ayudar a los niños a aprender hacer preguntas

Paper fortune teller for asking questions

Paper Fortune Teller for Asking “How are you?” questions

Paper Fortune Teller for Topics of Weather & Weekends

Paper Fortune Teller for Asking Opinions

Paper Fortune Teller for Christmas Social Skills

Paper Fortune Teller for Talking about Covid-19

*Don’t miss these other free social skills games, worksheets and therapy resources for children on the autism spectrum:

Free social skills games & activities, communication / conversation skills for kids with ASD

Free social skills games & activities, social interaction skills for kids with ASD

Free social skills games & activities, emotional regulation skills for kids with ASD

Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.

Emotion Cards – social skills games and activities to help teach emotional awareness to children with ASD

Here is a set of emotion cards that can be used in all kinds of ways in social skills teaching.  There are two card decks which are used together: Emotion Word Cards and Question Cards.
Here is a set of emotion cards that can be used in all kinds of ways in social skills teaching. There are two card decks which are used together: Emotion Word Cards and Question Cards.

Children with ASD and Emotional Awareness

Children on the autism spectrum may experience a range of challenges with respect to emotions.  They may find it difficult to accurately recognize and name their own emotions.  They may find it confusing to imagine the emotions of other people.  They often find it difficult to understand how the words and actions of one person may affect the emotions of another person.

Elsewhere on this website, I have provided a number of free games and activities to help children with ASD to understand emotions and deal with upsetting feelings (follow link HERE to find these). 

Download the Emotion Cards PDF by clicking on the red link below:

Emotion Card Activity – PDF

French translation:

Jeu de Cartes à Emotions

Polish translation:

Emocjekarty do gry

Description of the cards and how to use them:

There are two decks of cards.  The first deck, Emotion Word Cards, features 44 different words describing positive and negative emotions.  The second deck,  comprised of  48 Question Cards,  has a wide variety of questions, tasks and role play assignments.

The most basic game to play with the cards is to place each deck face down, and direct the player to draw one card from each deck.  The combination of cards drawn determines what task the player is directed to perform.  For example, if the player draws the Emotion Card, “WORRIED,” and the Question Card, “Tell about a time you felt like this,” then the player must tell about a time he felt worried.

Here are a few variations on using the cards.

Emotion Card Example

Several of the Question Cards direct the player to make their face look like the feeling on the Emotion Card they drew.

Emotion Card Example, Emotion Storytelling

In the example right above, the player is directed to make up a story featuring three Emotion Cards he drew.  There are other related Question Cards which direct the player to cooperate with other players in telling a sequential story involving a series of Emotion Cards (see example below).

Emotion Card Example: Group storytelling

 Below are several more typical combinations of cards that can come up.  Look them over and see whether these might be useful for your students or clients.

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How to make the cards:

You will need to print them on card stock, or on paper which you will then laminate.

Joel Shaul, LCSW



Don’t miss these other free games, worksheets and activities to help children with autism learn about emotions and feelings.

Anime Emotion Coloring Sheets

Anime Emotion Cards

Paper Fortune Tellers for Feelings

20 More Free Emotional Skills Activities for Children

Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.

ASD Feel Better Promo square directing to JKP

The Conversation Train Book

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Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.

Correcting others and tattling too much: Social skills activities to teach kids with autism who have these problems

tattling autism social skills game

Social skills games and learning activities for tattling and correcting

I created these materials ten years ago and just finished a re-design of the whole kit.

Young people on the autism spectrum can come across as rigid and bossy at times to their peers. Children with ASD can misinterpret complex social situations and express themselves too openly, without considering the broader social consequences.

Figuring out when to “tattle” or correct someone is very hard. I designed the 48 question cards to include a lot of challenging questions that don’t have clear-cut answers.

When you use the cards, feel free to go through the deck and select the ones that seem best for the young people you are helping, based on their age, level of comprehension and particular issues they are dealing with.

Children like to hold the cards and have an actual “deck” to play with, but this social skills activity also really works well in the screen display version (which is the version I most often use myself, for groups and teletherapy).


I hope these materials are useful for you in your work.

Joel Shaul

Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.

The Conversation Train Book

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Your Interests Promo image for website

11 wall displays / visual tools for autism social skills teaching. Free downloads.

Many of my social skills resources for children with autism include large visuals that can be used either as accessories during teaching or as wall displays.  Below you will find links to eleven of my blog posts which feature large, illustrated panels as part of the kit.

To go to the resource, click on the PICTURE.

Rigidity blog display

Rigidity / Flexibility  Panels

These are part of a social skills kit which includes lots of scenario and role play cards.

Losing blog display

Dealing with Losing and Disappointment Panels

Tattling blog display

Tattling and Correcting Panels

These are a part of big free download kit which includes dozens of picture cards

Empathy blog display Showing Concern Panels

social skills activities for children on the autism spectrum

Silly to Serious Kit

These are part of a big kit that includes dozens of situation and role play cards.  Many teachers in autistic support classrooms have found the panels useful for behavioral classroom management.  You can put an arrow on one of the four levels and say “We are at this level now.”

Teasing blog display

Teasing / Bullying Panels

This is part of a larger kit which includes a lot of situation and question cards to help children with autism to deal with the practical and emotional aspects of being teased and bullied.

Full body listening panels for children with autismComponents of Listening Panels

There is also a simple worksheet using the same set of visuals.

Conversation Box Panels

Reciprocal Conversation Panels

This is part of a kit that includes a card game activity for conversation activities with children on the autism spectrum.  It is derived from a concept of RDI.

autism compliments social skills activityCompliment Matching Panels

These panels, a sample from the People Points kit I sell, is to help children on the autism spectrum to practice the social skill of giving compliments.

Girl talk to panels blog images to jpeg

Panels on Relating to Girls

These are part of a kit which includes role play and situation cards for teen boys on the autism spectrum who are learning social skills relating to female peers.

This photo was sent in by an SLP in California.
This photo was sent in by an SLP in California.

Your comments on these resources are most welcome, and often helpful. Click HERE to send an email.

Your Interests Promo image for website

The Conversation Train Book

Green Zone Book Cover Click to Learn More