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Typing Speed Test For Special Education

Personal best 0 WPM

60s
Time
—
WPM
—
Accuracy

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As a special education teacher, I must ensure that each Individualized Education Program (IEP) is tailored to meet the unique needs of my students. Today, I reviewed the IEPs for Sarah, who requires additional support in reading comprehension, and Alex, who needs speech therapy. I scheduled a meeting with the parents on March 15th at 3 PM to
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Typing Speed Test
Typing Speed Test For Special Education
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Improve your typing speed

Practice with real-world sentences written for special education.

12 special education drills
5 starter lessons

Special Education practice

Job-specific typing drills

12
1Student IEP updatePlease review and sign Sarah's updated IEP for the upcoming meeting.Start2Parent meeting reminderDon't forget the meeting with Alex's parents on March 15th at 3 PM.Start3Therapist coordinationI will contact the speech therapist regarding Alex's progress this week.Start4Progress report entryEnter the latest evaluations for Emily's occupational therapy sessions.Start5Classroom support noteMegan needs additional assistance during math activities and group work.Start6Behavior incident reportDocument the incident involving Jason and the classroom disruption today.Start7Resource allocationRequest extra sensory tools for the classroom to support diverse learning needs.Start8IEP goal settingSet new IEP goals for John in reading fluency and social interactions.Start9Staff collaborationCollaborate with the special education team to review each student's progress.Start10Evaluation schedulingSchedule the next round of evaluations for the students by April 10th.Start11Feedback requestAsk for feedback from parents about the effectiveness of current strategies.Start12End of year summaryPrepare the end-of-year summary report for all students in the program.Start

Need typing fundamentals?

5-step path for keyboard basics

0/5 done
1Home Row FoundationGetting StartedMaster the foundation keys: F, J, D, K, S, L, AStart2Home Row CombinationsGetting StartedPractice letter combinations with home row keysStart3Complete AlphabetExpanding KeysPractice all 26 letters togetherStart4Speed Building BasicsBuilding FluencyFocus on typing speed with familiar wordsStart5Essential PunctuationBuilding FluencyMaster period, comma, question mark, exclamationStart
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FAQ

Common questions

Speed targets and tips for special education.

35
Beginner
50
Target WPM
65
Advanced
1

What is a good typing speed for special education?

Many special education aim for around 50 WPM with high accuracy. Teams in this space rely on keyboard work throughout the day. Beginners often start near 35 WPM, while experienced typists exceed 65 WPM.

2

Is this typing speed test free for special education?

Yes. TypingGuild's test is completely free, requires no signup, and works in your browser. Choose a 1, 3, or 5-minute session depending on how much time you have to practice.

3

How can special education improve typing speed?

Practice regularly with focused drills, prioritize accuracy before speed, and retest weekly. Most special education see noticeable gains within a few weeks of consistent short sessions.

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