The Autism Little Learners Podcast

#167: Mini-Schedules: The Visual Support You're Probably Missing


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Your visual schedule helps students understand the structure of the day. But what helps them understand what's happening inside each activity?

In this episode, we explore mini-schedules, a visual support that breaks down the steps within an activity so students can see what they are doing right now, how much there is to do, and when the activity will end.

Even when a daily visual schedule is working well, some moments of the day can still feel unpredictable or overwhelming. Mini-schedules provide clarity within those moments, helping reduce uncertainty and supporting participation.

In This Episode, You'll Learn

• The difference between a daily visual schedule and a mini-schedule • Why activities that feel open-ended can increase anxiety for some students • How mini-schedules help make the beginning, middle, and end of an activity visible • Which classroom activities benefit most from mini-schedules • How to visually track progress through an activity as each step is completed • The difference between first/then boards and compliance-based reward systems • How to use first/then as a simple visual sequence rather than a behavioral tool • When to expand beyond first/then into multi-step visual sequences • The difference between mini-schedules and visual sequences for routines • How to begin introducing mini-schedules in your classroom or therapy space

Key Takeaways

• Visual schedules outline the day, but mini-schedules clarify what is happening within each activity • When activities feel endless or undefined, a child's nervous system may stay on edge • Mini-schedules make the structure of an activity visible and predictable • Seeing progress through an activity helps students tolerate the middle of the task • First/then boards work best when used as neutral sequencing tools rather than reward systems • Mini-schedules are flexible and change depending on the activity • Visual sequences support routines that happen the same way every time • Adding visual structure within activities can reduce anxiety and increase participation

When students can see where an activity begins and ends, the experience becomes more manageable.

Try This

• Choose one activity that tends to feel difficult or unpredictable for students • Break the activity into 3–5 visible steps and create a simple mini-schedule • Visibly mark each step as it is completed by removing, covering, or moving the icon • Try using a mini-schedule during circle time, art, music, or small group activities • Use first/then boards as a visual sequence rather than a reward structure • Post visual sequences for routines like handwashing, arrival, or getting dressed

Small layers of visual clarity can significantly reduce uncertainty during activities.

Related Resources & Links

Autism Little Learners Membership: www.autismlittlelearners.com/pod

Visual Schedules Made Easy Course

Visual Schedules: Choosing The Symbols And Length

Using A Visual Schedule At Preschool: 3 Types To Promote Independence

Visual Supports Coaching Week

Visual Supports Starter Set

Portable Visual Schedules

Mini-schedules are not about controlling behavior. They are about making expectations visible and predictable. When students can see what they are doing, how much there is to do, and when the activity will end, their nervous system has the information it needs to stay regulated and engaged.

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The Autism Little Learners PodcastBy Tara Phillips

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