It’s low enough to store under a table or a shelf. This rolling file cart will roll easily where I need it and it will hold plenty of files. I didn’t need to hire an engineer to do it! Took less than 10 minutes. (I couldn’t even get all the pieces back in the box! Has that ever happened to you?)Īfter a little more searching, I found a perfect replacement rolling file cart.įirst, it was easy to assemble. My non-mechanical brain envisioned hours of frustration assembling it, so I quickly packed it back up to return it to the store. It looked more like an erector set than a file cart. When the box arrived, I discovered that the cart I purchased was broken down into about 50 pieces. The sales person steered me to a cart that “would work.” Of course they were out of stock, so she offered to have it shipped. The one I have now is quickly “dying.” It wobbles and won’t roll and just plain needs replacing. My journey started when I went to one of my local office supply stores looking for a rolling file cart. But I made a discovery this week that may provide part of a very workable answer. It’s really very personalized to match your own personal organization style. Unfortunately, there’s not a simple answer. How do you organize your tools for autism communication? Important question. The question that surfaces pretty quickly is, “How do you store them?” You need to be able to find the visual tool you need when you need it. Once you really become a “believer” of using visual supports, you’ll very naturally begin developing more visual tools to use for the many communication needs in the life of your child or students. Starting a new year is a perfect time to organize or re-organize. Autism communication question “Where do you store your visual tools?”Ī frequent autism communication question I receive is about how to store and organize your visual tools.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |