Guest guest Posted October 5, 2007 Report Share Posted October 5, 2007 I am working with a student who has a PDD-NOS diagnosis. He is very bright, VERY verbal ;-) and has a whole lot of energy. His comprehension to listening activities is very good, and he has very good imaginative play skills. I am having trouble teaching him to read numbers and letters as well as sight words including his name and words on the Edmark PC program. I am using ITT, 1:1. He is progressing VERY slowly and inconsistently, and gets frustrated, He is very motivated to start work and we seem to have paired well. He is on or level when it comes other math aspects which do not require numbers; same with reading aspects (such as story comprehension) that do not require letters/words. He has been working on the same goals for the past year (rec/exp id letters, own name, numbers)when he was in pre-k (with a different teacher), I now have him for K. I have been working with him using Edmark since the summer and he is just starting lesson 17 (my other students all thrive with the program), I am worried that he may have other needs that I am not see or understand to help him reach his full potential. I am thinking maybe dyslexia and/or dyscalculia. Does anyone have insights how I could better help this student? I am VERY concerned by his lack of progress. Please help. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ ----------------------------------------------- Some very simple things you might try are using a " window " cut in a piece of colored cardboard so that he can focus on one word or set of numbers at a time. This might help if he does better with single words than sentences or phrases. One other low tech thing I do is get a label maker that has a small screen (Like the Brother p-touch) so that he can see what he is typing on a very limited screen, and then print it out and stick it on paper for his assignment. It might be fun for him to type his name that way. You can prompt keys using a laser pointer or pencil. Or you could try one of the old Language Master machines, often available on ebay. You can write and record words, letters or numbers on large cards and the student identifies them or just puts them in the machine to hear what is recorded. The card travels right to left so that it goes past his eyes in the same direction as reading left to right. This can easily be used to supplement any program you are currently using. You might also look into Montessori-style exercises such as writing letters very large in the air, then on a blackboard the same size, then smaller, etc. Sometimes writing letters and numbers helps kids learn to identify them. Darla ************************************** See what's new at http://www.aol.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.