Make March speech therapy sessions interactive and fun with this seasonal sentence-building activity! Your students will love forming creative sentences while practicing essential language skills like WH-questions, expressive language, grammar, and syntax. Featuring St. Patrick’s Day, Women’s History Month, spring, March Madness, and more, this activity keeps kids engaged while targeting key speech and language goals.
Designed for K-6th grade students, Clever Clover March Sentences uses a mix-and-match format where students combine who, what, where, when, and why cards to build silly sentences while finding success with their IEP goals.
Two versions are included: a black-bordered set and a color-coded version for extra support, ensuring accessibility for all learners.
What’s Included in This Clever Clover March St. Patrick’s Day Sentence Builder:
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12 ‘who’ cards featuring Clever Clover characters
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28 ‘what’ cards with March-themed actions (planting flowers, making rainbow slime, writing about a leprechaun, etc.)
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24 ‘where’ cards with unique locations (by a rainbow, at a St. Patrick’s Day parade, in a field of clovers, etc.)
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16 ‘when’ cards (On Pi Day, During March Madness, On the first day of spring, etc.)
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24 ‘why’ cards with silly reasons (because they were feeling lucky, to make a pie, to catch a leprechaun, etc.)
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1 visual sentence-building mat
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1 student worksheet for independent practice
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2 Versions: black-bordered and color-coded for differentiation
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Clear instructions for implementation
You’ll love how this resource combines sentence-building practice with themes of luckiness and spring! Students will stay engaged as they mix and match sentence components to create both silly and meaningful sentences. The color-coded version makes it easier for students who need visual support, while the included worksheet provides an extra opportunity for independent practice. Plus, it’s completely low-prep—just print, cut, and go!
Perfect For
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Sentence building and formulation
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WH question practice
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Grammar and syntax development
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Vocabulary expansion
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Narrative skills
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Following directions
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Critical thinking
Implementation Tips
Start simple by having students create basic sentences using 2-3 components, then gradually add more elements as they progress. Challenge advanced students to move sentence parts around or create silly friendship stories. The activity works great as a quick warm-up or full session material.
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