Supporting children with reading and writing difficulties week 6
Accommodations
Allow for extra time
bigger font size - 14 Ariel
Allow computer
Define words
Teach spelling of subject specific vocab
Don't double side pages - dyslexic learners often miss the verso side of the page
Don't take off marks for spelling, especially if it is not the competency being measured
When evaluating spelling allow for modified marking - eg if they get 20 words to learn, tell dyslexic child to write the ones they think they know and their mark is how many they got correct vs how many they attempted.
Read questions aloud unless evaluating reading
Use visuals to support input as well as manual-kinaesthetic
Evaluate one aspect of the writing eg spelling, grammar, punctuation...
Write the correct answer for spelling. Circle correct words
Provide students with multiplication tables for maths
Provide a summary of the lesson rather than get them to write it. Get them to highlight key words (for example ) so that they are not passive.
Evaluate orally rather than in writing
Discuss a mistake as a positive thing eg over-generalisation can talk about the rules and the exceptions
Celebrate progress.
Text -to - speech conversion
Record questions
History - allow for use of computer, vocabulary, define words, bigger fonts, they may reverse dates - don't penalise them for that, allow for use of mind maps
Maths - have multiplication tables next to them, display four basic operations, evaluate reasoning and result separately, simplify instructions, allow use of computer/calculator
Technology Aids Reading
Programs may have been superseded by something more useful
Text to speech; annotation tools (on and offline); change visual appearance of text (colour, contrast, font, letter spacing, smaller window?); organisational tools for collating information from multiple text sources
Text to speech - AT bar (text to speech, magnify text, take images, use dictionary);
Change visual appearance of text - eg change background/text colour;
Annotation - eg increasing letter spacing. Voice Dream includes this.
Size of Windows - a guide for lines, text in columns. Try what works with individual students.
Organisational tools - Evernote, Trello (project management tool, allows different people in a team to log in, assign tasks to different people), reminders
Give responsibility to students to choose apps that work for them
Aids for Writing
Pre-writing - graphic organisers, mind maps etc. Kidsperartion. Pre-planning is VERY important for children with dyslexia. We have a tendency to rush the pre-writing stage and it is important that this doesn't happen with dyslexic learners.
Writing - text expander - shortcut so that don't have to type whole word - Phrase Express, Let Me Type; Live scribe digital pen audio records the writing (for notetaking); Ginger spell checker - takes into account context; Speech to text tools - use with caution with younger children because of the frustrations involved in training the software, also has difficulty with accents, hard to speak in the same way that you write so might add cognitive demands rather than reduce them
Aids for Memory
Can we increase our memory? Science isn't clear
Software to increase memory span - some evidence that can increase specific skill you are training but unsure how generalised this skill is
If we know that auditory memory is vulnerable, support it with our other senses eg images, videos, manipulating objects
Overlearning things - once introduced word, then get them to do more active retrieval, repetition of word over time (Word Generation)
Chunking - instructions are in chunks so that they can be remembered (eg digit span test)
Front-load key information - say action verb in instruction early on; give visual back-up
Think of a signal the child can give that they don't understand that won't be obvious to other children
Record instructions
Aids for Organisation
People with dyslexia may also have problems with things in time and space
Can be seen as a motivational thing rather than related to dyslexia
Scaffold some planning strategies
Orientation in time (timetabling, planning) - eg timetable using symbols and pictures to aid memory
Timetables in multiple places
Timetables that make sense for the student = collaborative effort
Give students content before hand so they can plan
When setting homework allow some time in class so misunderstandings can be clarified
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