Lesson Plan

Be Your Own Advocate

Students will define self-advocacy, identify personal strengths and needs, learn and apply simple sentence starters, and practice using them in role-play scenarios to ask for support.

Self-advocacy empowers students to express their needs, build confidence, and foster independence—critical skills for academic success and personal growth, especially for students with ASD who benefit from clear supports.

Audience

Time

Approach

Materials

Prep

Prepare Materials

10 minutes

Step 1

Introduction to Self-Advocacy

5 minutes

Step 2

Identify Personal Strengths and Needs

7 minutes

Step 3

Learn Self-Advocacy Sentences

5 minutes

Step 4

Role-Play Scenarios

10 minutes

Step 5

Reflection and Next Steps

3 minutes

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Lesson Plan

Self-Advocacy Lesson Plan

By the end of this 30-minute lesson, 5th grade students transitioning to middle school will define self-advocacy, identify personal strengths and needs, choose two sentence starters, and practice asking for support—building confidence for their upcoming middle school experience.

As rising middle schoolers, students need self-advocacy skills to navigate new settings, communicate needs, and seek help—fostering independence and readiness.

Audience

Time

Approach

Materials

Prep

Prepare Materials

10 minutes

Step 1

Welcome & Context

5 minutes

Step 2

Identify Strengths & Needs

7 minutes

Step 3

Learn & Practice Starters

5 minutes

Step 4

Role-Play Scenarios

10 minutes

Step 5

Reflection & Next Steps

3 minutes

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Slide Deck

Speak Up! Self-Advocacy for Rising Middle Schoolers

Welcome students and introduce the focus on middle school readiness. Explain that today’s lesson will help them learn how to speak up for themselves in new settings.

What Is Self-Advocacy?

Ask: “What does it mean to speak up for yourself? How could that help you in middle school?”

Strengths & Needs Chart (Middle School Example)

Model filling in one strength and one need related to middle school (e.g., “I work best when I have a visual schedule” / “I need help finding my locker”). Invite a volunteer to add another example.

Self-Advocacy Sentence Starters

Read each starter aloud, then show how to fill in blanks for a middle school scenario (e.g., “Can I have a map of the hallways?”). Have students choose two to practice.

Role-Play Instructions

Explain each step clearly and remind students to imagine real middle school moments like finding a locker or asking for directions.

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Worksheet

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Worksheet

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Activity

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Cool Down

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Speak Up!

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SarahLane McGillis

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