The Boy Who Paints in Patterns: A Story of Sensory Joy (BOOK: Children’s/ YA)

What if a loud hallway looked like jagged red zig-zags — and a honey jar cast a golden triangle worth saving forever? Meet Myron, the heart of this beautifully crafted neurodiversity eBook by NBCT Maria Angala. The Boy Who Paints in Patterns: A Story of Sensory Joy follows a young visual thinker whose brain works like a high-definition camera, finding wonder and pattern in everything around him. Instead of framing sensory differences as struggles, this story celebrates them — redefining stimming as “a happy flutter” and sensory overwhelm as something Myron navigates with quiet grace. Written at the 420L–820L Lexile range, this low-prep digital resource is scaffolded for IEPs and aligned to CCSS literacy standards. Available as an eBook, PDF, and interactive Easel Activity — perfect for SPED, ELL, and inclusive classrooms. Every brain is a kaleidoscope. This book proves it.

Glitch in the System: A Cyberpunk Neurodiversity Adventure (BOOK Children’s/ YA)

What if ADHD wasn’t a deficit — but an elite neural upgrade? In the neon-lit city of Neo-Veridia, teenager Jax doesn’t struggle with a “too-fast” brain; he uses it to crack security systems that leave everyone else stumped. Glitch in the System is a cyberpunk eBook by NBCT Maria Angala that reframes neurodivergence as a superpower, following Jax as he detects invisible patterns, enters hyperfocus on demand, and outsmarts a mega-corp where neurotypical thinking fails. It’s a thrilling read — and a powerful mirror for students who’ve been told their brain is the problem. Built for the 420L–820L Lexile range and scaffolded for IEPs, this TpT resource includes an eBook, interactive Easel Activities, and PLUSS-aligned differentiation targeting CCSS standards RL.6.1 and RL.6.3. Perfect for SPED, ELL, and inclusive classrooms ready to tell students: you’re not a glitch — you’re the system upgrade.

How I Use the STAR Strategy for Math Word Problems | Problem Solving Step

This post shows how Maria Angala, NBCT, teaches students a clear, step-by-step approach to solving math word problems using the STAR Strategy (Scan, Think, Answer, Review). Many learners struggle not because they lack computation skills but because they don’t know how to approach the problem itself. STAR gives them a predictable routine: Scan the problem to understand what’s being asked, Think about operations and information, Answer with a complete solution, and Review to check accuracy and reasoning. With visuals, anchor charts, and practice, students build confidence, reduce overwhelm, and strengthen problem-solving independence. This strategy supports neurodiverse and multilingual learners by making abstract processes concrete and organized, helping them transfer skills across grade levels and math content areas.

How I Use the STAR Reading Comprehension Strategy | Task Analysis

This post explains how Maria Angala, NBCT, uses a structured STAR reading strategy to support students who struggle with managing the steps of comprehension tasks. Instead of leaving learners to guess how to approach questions, she breaks down the process into predictable steps—Start with the question, Think and read the text, Answer the question, and Reread to check work—so students gain confidence and independence. By turning “read and answer” into a clear routine, Maria helps neurodiverse, multilingual, and struggling readers reduce overwhelm, stay focused on the evidence in the text, and self-monitor their thinking. With anchor charts and visuals serving as a “silent co-teacher,” students shift from confusion to purposeful reading and build the habits of thoughtful comprehension across content areas.

How I Teach Summarizing Reading Comprehension Strategy

This post shares how Maria Angala, NBCT, teaches students to summarize text with purpose and clarity by focusing on key ideas instead of retelling every detail. She explains the common struggle learners have with identifying important information and offers a practical, structured routine using the 5W’s and 1H (Who, What, When, Where, Why, How) to guide thinking. With simple scaffolds like graphic organizers and visual prompts, students learn to filter out unimportant details, highlight essentials, and write concise summaries. This strategy builds stronger reading comprehension, critical thinking, and academic writing skills that transfer across subjects, helping students become more independent and confident readers.

How to Teach Summarizing as a Reading Comprehension Strategy for Students with Disabilities and ELL Learners

In this post, Maria Angala, NBCT, shares how she teaches students to think about their thinking using a structured metacognition strategy. She explains the shift from focusing only on finished work to helping learners plan, monitor, and reflect on their process, which supports independence and deeper understanding. By breaking tasks into concrete phases—Plan, Monitor, and Reflect—students gain tools to set goals, check their thinking in real time, and evaluate what worked. This approach helps neurodiverse and multilingual learners build executive functioning, self-awareness, and problem-solving skills they can use across content areas and beyond the classroom, preparing them for future success.

How To Use Instagram in the Classroom

This post explores practical, creative ways teachers can integrate Instagram as a classroom tool to enhance engagement, communication, and learning. It highlights how Instagram can be used to showcase student work, document classroom activities, and connect learning experiences through images and captions. The post also discusses using hashtags for organization, fostering digital citizenship, and leveraging visual storytelling for projects like book talks, vocabulary posts, and collaborative challenges. By thoughtfully embedding classroom Instagram use into instruction, educators can meet students where they are digitally, enrich lessons, and build community while maintaining appropriate policies and privacy practices.