Technology usually has a unique appeal to children and adults with autism. While it can also be overused and prevent children from learning social skills, most parents also find that the technology can become a very useful learning tool. After all, it’s hard to imagine a teacher that could hold your child’s attention the way an iPad can.

I know when teaching my students with autism, I frequently interacted with their parents in an ongoing discussion as to the best apps to help this particular child for this or that particular problem. It can actually be overwhelming how many exist!

Well, to make things easier, below are a few apps that show a lot of promise in assisting our young ones with autism.

Social and behavioral skills

1. Touch Autism – Touch Autism is a company that produces a whole range of apps for children with autism. Check out their store and scan the apps to see which ones fit your child’s needs. There are apps for teaching how to handle money, use “wh” questions, or tell jokes. The “Emotions and Feelings” app has been recommended by parents, as it uses a social story to demonstrate what various emotions look like on characters’ faces. Take a look and see if there is an app that fits your needs. Available on iTunes and Google Play.

2. ClassDojo – If your child is running into behavioral problems (many children with autism struggle with appropriate touch and managing their emotions), you may want to recommend this app to your child’s teacher. The child, teachers, and parents all download the app. Then, throughout the day, the teacher discreetly clicks feedback for how the child is doing. The child and parents can see this feedback. Using the ClassDojo means less embarrassing correction, more positive encouragement, and an immediate sense of what the child should be doing, if the child needs to be redirected. ClassDojo is available on iTunes and Google Play.

Functional skills

1. 4KidCal – By allowing children to enter important dates and events on a calendar through voice recordings (or typing), 4KidCal teaches children concepts of time and time management. It can be useful to children with autism when a change in routine is coming up. As the child learns to use the calendar and check it regularly, he or she will know how many more days until _________________ (fill in the blank with the activity), so that he or she can emotionally prepare for the transition. 4KidCal is only available on iTunes.

2. Choiceworks – Choiceworks is an iOS app that creates a visual (and flexible) schedule for the child. At any given point in the day, the child can see what’s coming next, and what his or her current choices are, and he or she is at in the schedule. Used properly, Choiceworks eliminates the anxiety surrounding transitions and unclear boundaries.

3. Autiplan – Autiplan has a lot in common with “Choiceworks,” in that it is creating clear, visual plans for children on the autism spectrum. There is one difference: It uses Android.

4. Chore Pad – Does your child struggle to internalize their chores? Like most activities, children with autism need to create a routine. Loading a child’s daily chores onto a visible app, which the child can check off as he or she goes, can allow independence, avoid meltdowns, and prevent you from nagging. Chore Pad is only available on iTunes.