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Visual Supports in Practice: Supporting Learning and Navigating Transitions

This article originally appeared in START Connecting in March 2026.

As the school year progresses and planning for the next year begins, inclusive classrooms remain active spaces where students learn, communicate, and grow in ways that reflect their individual strengths. Visual supports create clear expectations, support communication modalities, and give students tools to participate more independently in daily routines and classroom activities.

This time of year offers an opportunity to prepare for upcoming transitions. Visual supports that help students succeed now can also serve as tools in new classrooms, routines, and environments.

Teacher in front of the classroom

Why Visual Supports Matter

Visual supports are cues used alongside, or in place of, spoken language to help communicate information. As an evidence-based practice, they can benefit students in a wide range of learning environments, including inclusive classrooms (Steinbrenner et al., 2020).

Unlike verbal instructions, visual supports remain available for students to reference as needed. This ongoing access can support understanding, increase independence, and help students participate more fully in learning activities. Visual supports also allow students to access information and complete tasks with less reliance on adult prompting.

Visual supports make information more accessible and support students in navigating classroom routines and expectations, and may include pictures, symbols, objects, gestures, written words, or augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) systems. The Visual Supports AFIRM Module provides detailed information about setting up these types of supports in a classroom setting.

Because visual information remains available for students to reference, these supports can increase clarity and predictability throughout the school day. This consistency can be especially helpful during transitions, such as moving between activities, entering new environments, or preparing for changes in routine.

Smooth Transitions from Spring to Fall

As the school year concludes and fall planning begins, visual supports can help create continuity across classrooms, routines, and relationships. The strategies that support access and engagement now can also help students navigate the changes that come with a new school year.

Spring is a good time for teams to reflect on the visual supports that have been most effective. Schedules, choice boards, checklists, and visual cues that students already understand can be adapted for new settings and evolve to reflect the student's growth in independent use of the visual system over the course of the school year.

Preparing students for upcoming changes may include:

  • Reviewing familiar visual schedules and discussing how routines may look similar or different next year.
  • Creating simple visuals that preview new environments, staff members, or daily routines.
  • Practicing transitions using walkthroughs, photos, or short visits when possible.
  • Ensuring portable visual tools such as visual cards, schedule rings, or digital checklists can move with the student across settings.

Families are important partners in the support of visuals. Sharing visuals and checklists with families can help reinforce routines at home and support students as they prepare for upcoming changes.

What's Next

Reflecting on the visual strategies that supported students this year allows educators to intentionally carry those supports forward. When visual supports are designed, taught, and adapted across environments, they become tools students can use beyond a single classroom. Preparing and sharing these supports before the transition to fall can reduce uncertainty, strengthen independence, and help students begin the new school year with greater confidence. Over time, learning to use tools such as schedules and checklists can support access to learning and autonomy well beyond the classroom.

Written By: Sarah Laurence, M.Ed. - General Education Consultant and Jennifer Vivian, M.Ed. - General Education Consultant

Page last modified June 24, 2026