The summer Taxi the yellow lab puppy came to live in our home, I was spending my days at our kitchen table, tutoring children varying in ages from 4 to high school. All my students have dyslexia, a learning difference which makes it difficult to learn to read and spell. Dyslexic individuals can master language skills, but it requires a several years long tutoring commitment. Going to tutoring during the summer is about as popular with my students as going to bed early, so we thought a puppy in the house would add a fun element to the tutoring for the students.
It worked out great, and Taxi’s house training trips to the yard happened every hour on the hour, when one student finished up and the next one arrived. There is not much more enticing to a child than the sight of another child in the yard with a puppy, and you know your turn is next! Taxi’s magnetism didn’t stop at the yard though.
Harrison, one of my funny, awkward first grade pupils, adored Taxi. He sweet talked his long-suffering mother into arriving early for his lesson just so he could be sure to get his full five minutes of yard time with Taxi. Harrison would fling his tutoring notebook onto my porch, take his turn leading Taxi around the yard in search of the perfect spot, then proudly carry her inside, crooning softly into her ear as they walked along.
Not wanting his puppy time to end as we settled into the lesson, Harrison began to ask for ways that Taxi could help him learn better. Employing multi-sensory methods is part of the tutoring methodology for dyslexic learners. A fabric covered foam core board referred to as a fuzzy board was one tools I used each lesson. It didn’t take very long before – you guessed it- Harrison had Taxi up in his lap, carefully tracing his irregularly spelled words onto her silken fur.
Harrison graduated from high school last May. I recently ran into him, and after assuring me he was college bound in the fall, he asked about Taxi. To his delight, I was able to attest that she lives on, although no summer has ever been as magical for her as that first one, when she took on the role as Taxi, the canine tutoring assistant!

