Monday When
I tested K on her reading level, she scored at the reading level of a four and
a half-year-old. At present, K is 7 years old and is three years below reading
level for her age group. Reading group has always been an issue with K; she lacks
in concentration and is unable to stay on the same page with her peers when reading.
She will always be looking at the previous page or not paying attention when it
is her turn to read. In order to help her
reading I started a “Jump start” reading time with her. Three times a week she
comes to class ten minutes before the school bell rings. We sit together and go
through the book. I give K enough time in the beginning to look through the book
and all the pictures first. We then talk about what the story might be about.
If, in advance, I see words that I know K will struggle sometime I do a pre-lesson
by writing the word on a small white board and talking about the silent letters
or irregular spellings (e.g. ph sounds). I also try to read the story first to
K; then we take turns reading together. She reads a page, then I will. With K
and other children I tell the word if the child is struggling to read. What a
difference! Less stress for the children and of course for myself. Tuesday
Nobody likes to be a nagging, critical parent, and a constant stream of ‘Don’t
do this and don’t do that’ goes in one ear and out the othe. But I would strongly
urge parents to pick up on any incorrectly spoken words as soon as they hear their
dyslexic child say them. Dyslexic children have difficulty distinguishing the
slight differences in the sounds of words; for example instead of ‘Once upon a
time’ one of my pupils heard ‘Wallah wallah time’, and instead of ‘Amsterdam’,
she heard ‘Hamster day’! Hearing the words correctly means that a child will be
more likely to spell the words correctly. Dyslexia
Parents Resource Sunday
I was able to attend both a literacy and numeracy lesson to observe George's posture.
During numeracy he sat upright and listened attentively. He is right handed and
supported the book with his left hand when writing.
However
in the literacy lesson George spent most of the time with his left hand supporting
his head, or with his head laid on the table as if it were all too much to cope
with. He would rub his face, fiddle with his pencil or rock about on his chair.
I encouraged him to sit closer to the table with a more upright posture. When
he did this his writing was neater with less pencil pressure. I have followed
this up when he has been doing his homework. This good posture is becoming more
natural now and he appears less tensed up when dealing with writing tasks. Tuesday
One child I teach is 11 years old. She has been diagnosed with dyslexia. She has
great difficulties with her right and left and easily confuses them. When asked
to show me which is her right hand and which is her left, she isn’t able to answer
straight away. She will take a little time to look at both hands and then answer.
When she does answer, she gets them the wrong way around.
Every
time she does this I try to get her to remember that she writes with her right
hand and so every time she wants to find her right hand she lifts up the hand
she writes with. This will be a good strategy for her, but with short-term memory
problems it will take some time for her to learn this strategy. When
I ask her more complicated questions such as 'Touch your right ear with your left
hand', she has even more trouble. She tries to work out which is her right hand
and sometimes needs help with this; then she works out which is her left ear.
The biggest problem for her then was to combine both instructions; she found this
extremely difficult and required a lot of help to do it. So,
as part of the session every week we spend some time on right and left. To start
with we do the “Hokey Cokey” dance and she really enjoys this. It’s great for
teaching right and left as it’s repetitive and multi-sensory but most of all because
it’s so much fun. I stick right and left stickers on each arm and leg so she knows
which is which. As she got better at the dance I removed the stickers but she
still needed some reinforcement. Though
she might never completely overcome her right/left confusion, hopefully she will
learn strategies that will help her deal with her difficulties. Dyslexia
Magazine - Multisensory Teaching Methods Wednesday
In class, I have established a target-setting program for learning spellings,
which will enable the child to look at the list of given words for the spelling
test, and decide how many she thinks she will be comfortable learning that week.
Whilst others choose 20 words, the dyslexic child chooses 5. However, when the
tests are marked, she achieves her 5-word target, which is as much as the achievement
of those children whose target is 20. Children are then rewarded merit points
in line with their own target settings, NOT by the number out of 20 they have
achieved. Therefore, the dyslexic child is not penalized for her inability but
praised for her achievement. This, I found to be a very excellent method.
Monday
Jim
is in a class of 32 children, and he is not the only one with learning difficulties.
It is a difficult class. The class teacher has two assistants who are not trained,
and have no understanding of dyslexia. Jim is constantly shouted at and told how
lazy he is. He has a daily behavior report book to take home to show his parents
how “naughty” he is. One criticism he
hears daily is “You lazy boy! All you’ve got to do is copy from the board and
you can’t even do that.” Another one
is “You’re so horrible to everyone, any wonder they won’t play with you.” He often
hides his homework spelling list and is then told “You are so naughty, I think
you hid the list so you could just watch T.V. all night.” “Why
don’t you learn your tables? All the other children do.” These are just samples
of things I have heard said to this child Thursday
I feel that one of the most important ways to work with Sally is to help her understand
and be able to talk about her dyslexia. It is hard for a person to work on a weakness
or improve upon something that is causing trouble, if she doesn’t even know what
it’s about. When I first started working
with Sally, we made a chart of "Things that I am good at" and "Things that I am
not so good at". From this posted chart, Sally could readily see that she does
have a lot of things that she is good at. We look at the chart when we are planning
ways for Sally to use her strengths, as well as ways to work on the things she’s
not as good at, all in order to improve her output at school. Dyslexia
Parents Resource - Confidence Building Friday
Jo has problems copying from the board; he has expressed to me that he never has
enough time to copy assignments from the board. He said that he looses his place.
He will write an assignment that does not make sense because he left off some
of the information. Most recently Jo had problems copying math problems from the
board, they were problems that needed to be lined up correctly so that he could
multiply the columns. He left off part of the number and they were not lined up
correctly, he could not even do the problem.
I
called the resource room teacher to discuss my concern over his situation. She
now copies all math problems for him, because it is in his IEP as an accommodation.
She also gave him graph paper and showed him how to line up the numbers when he
did the problem so he could add his columns. Teaching him to get help (when something
needs to be copied for him) and then to be careful when doing the problem has
made a difference for him. He is not as frustrated and he can do the work that
he is expected to do. Jo also has trouble copying from a book, its basically the
same problem. Saturday I put
up a display in the classroom about differences. The whole class discussed the
issue and contributed (race, hair colour, skin, eyes, religion etc) but no-one
talked about learning requirements or disabilities. It was a good chance to talk
to some of the pupils about these issues and remind them that we do not all find
learning easy nor do we learn in the same way. Tuesday
One
new child that I observed in class is eight years old, very quiet and occasionally
withdrawn to the point of not speaking to anyone, including his peers. When the
other children are sitting on the carpet during the introduction to the lessons,
he is very often hiding under the tables and takes a lot of encouragement to get
him out. When asked to do literacy tasks, he wastes a lot of time preparing himself,
sharpening his pencil or getting a ruler, delaying the task in hand. When he settles
down, if he thinks the task is too hard he puts his arm across his book so that
no one can see it, and pretends to write. When asked if he would like to be helped,
he says he cannot do it and dissolves into tears. Some days he is not so tearful
but wastes a lot of time during the lesson disrupting others. Fortunately, his
parents are very supportive and I am hoping for some rapid progress with him.
Wednesday
I was speaking to John, one of my pupils, today, and asked him: Do you find that
you have enough time to copy from the board? He replied: "Most of the time it
is OK. If I realise that the teacher is going to ask us to copy from the board,
I start copying before she tells us to, so I finish. Some of the teachers, however,
only give us a little time at the end of the lesson and then if I don't finish
I have to ask my friend so that I can finish copying from his book."
Do
you sometimes lose your place when you are looking down at your paper and back
at the board? "Sometimes it happens, but this year it is better that I am sitting
right in front of the board. Also, this year teachers are not using the board
so much." I should mention that since
I knew about John's difficulties beforehand, I had already made sure that he sits
directly in front of the teacher and the board. Also, the teachers were advised
to use a dark board marker and avoid using curly, joint writing, if possible.
This helps John a lot. Saturday
I usually try to comment on good teaching methods, but yesterday, I had the opportunity
to observe a lesson that was so harmful for any dyslexic child in the class. Excuse
my notes, but this is what I saw and wrote down:
outline
of lesson not explained at beginning of lesson
the dyslexic
children would mostly be found sitting at the back of the classroom where they
could hopefully hide themselves they
would be asked to read inappropriate texts out loud in class, really being set
up to fail too
many spellings to learn. When the spelling test was completed books would be swapped
and the teacher would read out the spellings for pupils to correct. This was particularly
difficult for the dyslexic child as they found it difficult to follow. The marks
then had to be read out to the teacher
the class
had the same work, where the dyslexic child had difficulty he was classed as being
a dunce or naughty no
extra time was given for projects. No extra help when revising for exams. You
either passed or failed · tasks and instructions were not broken down into
achievable targets and therefore the pupils were often accused of not listening
they
were often unable to copy from the blackboard and were again accused of not listening
or concentrating. Sometimes suggestions about needing glasses would be made
work marked
down and then ridiculed in class often
kept in after school to complete work
Tuesday
I have a student who reverses b/d, p/q, e/a, and n/u. I have gone back to 'square
one' so to speak and introduced the letters over again using 'sky writing' (this
requires more movement). At a later date when we have review we will use sandpaper
to give it a more hands-to-brain connection. Once a week when we do a written
spelling deck I will have the students use shaving cream. (Just spray a glob on
a desk and the students smooth it out and are ready to write. They write a letter
and erase by smearing out on their desk again.) Sometimes we will take a field
trip to the parking lot and use sidewalk chalk. This way the child can make large
letters just like sky writing but they see what is written. All of these methods
reinforce the proper letter formation and direction. Dyslexia
Magazine - Multisensory Teaching Methods Wednesday
When I introduced the idea of doing calculations aloud, my new student was not
surprised to learn that it could help him remember things better. He immediately
told me about how he always would say the problems aloud when doing his math homework
or taking a test and how he frequently got in trouble by the teacher. He said
that the teacher once took away his test and gave him a zero because the teacher
thought that he was cheating and giving answers to his deskmate. After learning
this, I started to help him practice whispering so that it was hardly audible.
We kept testing different volumes and he saw that he didn’t need to say the numbers
very loudly. By the end of the game (which turned out to be quite fun!) we were
whispering silently - basically just moving our lips but not making any sound.
We kept practicing and it looks like even a soundless whisper made the calculations
easier for him. Dyslexia
Parents Resource - Math Saturday
It
saddens me to even think of how worthless this child once felt. My student, A.J.,
is now 10 years old and in 5th grade of elementary school. When in traditional
school she constantly referred to herself as stupid or dumb. One
day she asked me who Hitler was. When I explained, in what I thought were very
carefully chosen words, about the Holocaust and the mass killing of Jews, Catholics,
the mentally and physically challenged, amongst many others who did not fit into
his idea of perfection, to my horror she said to me, "You mean he would have killed
me?" I asked her what she meant, to
which she explained, "Because I'm an idiot and retarded." She went on to tell
me how only the mentally challenged children go to resource classes at school,
and how some of the children at school refer to them as "retards" and "idiots"
as well as many other awful terms. This
is a child who has been given a tremendous amount of support at home, with tutors,
and I thought, at school. It is amazing to realize whatever constant reinforcement
of her many wonderful qualities she has been given by adults, those few cruel
words spoken by her peers are the ones remembered. A.J.
was depressed during the whole school year. The only time she seemed really happy
was during vacations. She was always asking how long it was until the next break.
This must have seemed like an eternity to a child with no apparent concept of
time. This student has always been a hard worker and loved all her teachers. This
not wanting to go to school all stemmed from the behavior of other children. A.J.'s
3rd grade teacher stands out in my mind as a prime example of how this type of
behavior could be eradicated. The pupils in her classroom were so accepting of
each other's diversities it was a joy to behold. That was this child's only really
happy school year to my knowledge.
We must be aware of what is going on in our classrooms and homes, not just on
papers and the number of books read, but the tolerance and social interaction
of the children as well. We cannot blame children for unacceptable behavior: we
as the adults are here to educate them after all. Tuesday
Most of my
students have a problem with their ‘b’s, ‘d’s, ‘p’ and ‘q’ as well as the numbers
5, 3, 4 and 2. I have tried the usual exercises such as writing on the carpet,
in sand, and the word ‘bed’. Unfortunately these have not worked for some students,
so I had to try something different. Where
letters are of concern, I had heard of an exercise that optometrists use where
the client uses their arms and feet to denote which side the stick of the letters
go. I do not know the exercise but the idea appealed to me. I used this idea and
came up with an exercise where the student has to become the letter ‘b’, ‘d’,
‘p’, or ‘q’. They had to feel as if they were the letter, which is great for the
imagination. For the ‘b’ they had to put
their left hand in the air and for the letter ‘d’ they had to put her right hand
in the air. Their arms would be the stick and their head would be the circle of
the letter. For the ‘p’ and ‘q’ we used their legs, the left for the ‘p’ and the
right for the ‘q’. The ‘q’ contained a little sideways flick of the lower half
of the leg indication the flick up on the bottom of the ‘q’. The exercise consisted
of writing a couple of lines of ‘b’s, ‘d’s ‘p’s and ‘q’s mixed up on the board
(eg. b p d p b q d b p d q b d etc.) They would mimic the letters with actions.
I added music to it (melodic is a right hemisphere function that is equivalent
to the language centre in the left hemisphere.) All combined, this exercise produces
much laughter which not only makes the lesson fun, it also aided memory retention
and retrieval. This exercise is done daily. After
one week I noticed that reversals had become a rarity.
Dyslexia
Magazine - Multisensory Teaching Methods Wednesday
I was reading with my student who has word/letter fear, i.e. too many words on
the page and the print too small. We were reading Dr Seuss which he finds enjoyable,
but still has words he doesn't know. On finding a word he didn't know, I suggested
that he tried to say the letters to himself which he did and surprised himself
with the correct answer. If we come across a word like 'smile' I just remind him
of the 'magic e' and he now confidently makes the correct word. I also suggested
the student closes his eyes and tries to see the word in his mind. This often
works with words like 'said'. If he has a problem with a word, I will quickly
tell him the word. We make a game of 'trying to guess the word'.
I
made a point of telling him any difficult words and when he came across them again
and he remembered them and was quite pleased with himself. The student made comments
like 'cat' has the same letters as 'hat' but different first letters. He continued
to compare words with similar blends and took great pride in showing them to me.
This chatting and looking for similar words encouraged the student to read more
pages than usual as he wanted to find more similar words. Dyslexia
Parents Resource - Hearing Your Child Read Saturday
A 14-year old pupil of mine told me today about an amazing website for teachers
and their pupils. It's called www.think.com and is completely free, apparently.
Schools can register with them, and then their teachers can have their own webspace
which the pupils can see by using a password given to them by their school. The
children can also have their own webspace, with tools to help them put material
there. The first thought that came into
my mind when I heard about this was homework instructions. It's so hard for a
dyslexic child to copy down homework details written hurriedly by a teacher on
the board in the last minute of the lesson. Children often arrive home with only
part of the homework copied accurately, and, even if they want to help, parents
are stuck. The child cannot complete the work and is terrified of being in trouble
in school the next day. This new system
- or similar versions - could so easily be used by teachers to put the homework
for their classes on a webpage instead. Then pupils could look it up at home,
and parents would know exactly what was required! Monday
I purchased a spell checker for one of my students this past week. He seems to
enjoy using it for fun and finding words. When he is writing essays or stories
he becomes discouraged with the amount of time it takes to type in the words.
He ends up just mis-spelling the words in order to keep up with the class or even
ahead of the class. He stresses easily and then loses interest with the spell
check.
We have discovered that learning
ending sounds and beginning sounds has drastically improved my student's spelling
level. The sounds are making sense and helping him spell correctly. We did not
realize that this would give us a bonus in spelling plus improve his reading!
We are still having trouble learning the long vowel sounds in words. The concept
seems overwhelming to him, but we will continue to work in that area until we
are successful! Dot's
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