Guest guest Posted November 3, 2003 Report Share Posted November 3, 2003 OK, I know that we as parents can often get more from our kids than teachers (or teachers can get more from them than parents :-) When talking with the teacher briefly today, she mentioned that she thought one of the SLPs goals was too advanced for . When I asked what it was, she told me it was " blending " , and that she thought that needed to know all her individual sounds first. I was shocked...... told the teacher that she know them all, and that hadn't she noticed that at school? Teacher said no, she would assess her again. She has been doing many letter sounds since preschool, and lately been driving me absolutely nuts :-) with the " Alphabet sound song " ...... do ya know it...... A A A A Apple, B B B B Bubbles, C C C C Cookie, etc. So, today after school, I decided to " assess " her myself. Sat her in front of the computer with me, typed in various individual letters in large font, and asked her what they said. She got every one right (though she does have a little trouble making the sound for r, but she has a consistent sound for that). Then, I typed in single words like cat, dog, hat and asked her what they were. She guessed random words (pig, goat, Jesus, umbrella)..... guess sight words are not there yet. So, I asked her to sound them out and tell me each letter. So, for cat, she would say the sounds for " c " " a " " t " correctly, but then when I'd try and get them together, we'd go back to random guessing. Even though she can " sound out " the word, she has trouble putting them together. Anyone have any advice here, because I know that the classroom teacher thinks the only way to teach her to read is sight words (which are important too, but I think I'd like to try both ways at this point). I'm impressed with her great grasp of phonics...... she is only 5, and I'll bet there are typical kids in her kindergarten who don't know all the letter sounds yet. Then, we moved on to rhyming words, which I have also been told she can't do. I typed at, Mad, Sad, Bad, Dad, Had in a column, with the " ad " underlined at the top, and had the M,S,B,D and H in red. She could again, sound out the words, but not put them together. Then I tried (after going through the list with her), asking which word was " S " ad (emphasizing the S sound), and she picked it right out. Same with the other words..... as long as she heard the first sound, she could pick out the word. Did this with the " ook " family, and the " at " family, with the same results. So, she really does not get the concept of rhyming, but is picking letters sounds out to choose the correct words. Any thoughts on this, and how to get the concept across. I'm guessing these will be topics of discussion at Friday's IEP. , mom to (8), (5), and (4) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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