Brenda’s Story

Brenda’s Story

Imagine a child so reluctant to write that she lays her pencil down between each word.  That child was Brenda on her first day in my fifth-grade small group. We had opened the first day of a new small group by talking about how the students felt about reading, spelling, and writing – the areas which tend to give students with dyslexia the most difficulty.  Brenda quietly let us know she liked reading, and could work on spelling, but strongly disliked writing. Brenda arrived at this dislike of writing in what is, unfortunately, the usual way.  

Her mom began noticing that Brenda had some differences in her reading compared with the older children in the family when Brenda began completing assigned reading homework in first grade.  When they read together, Brenda tended to either skip over or greatly struggle with common, high-frequency words which other children her age read with ease. If there were questions to answer about the passage, Brenda would have no idea how to answer – as if she had not listened to herself reading.  Spelling in the early years was a complete mystery to Brenda. She simply didn’t make the connection between the letters and the sounds they represented. Brenda and her mom spent a great deal of time studying and working on word lists for upcoming spelling tests only to have Brenda perform very poorly on test day.  

Being a proactive mom, Mrs. C researched possible reasons for the language struggles and took Brenda to be tested for dyslexia at the end of Brenda’s second-grade year.  The test results found that Brenda was identified with characteristics of a person with dyslexia.  Feeling she had found her answer, Mrs. C. pulled Brenda out of XYZ, the private church school she had been attending, and intended to homeschool her.  A plan for teaching Brenda to read using phonics was recommended, so Mrs. C. purchased a popular book on how parents can teach their children to read in just over three months’ time.  She had successfully homeschooled her older children, so felt prepared for the task of teaching Brenda to read.  

Brenda did not share her mom’s enthusiasm for their homeschooling endeavors.  Mrs. C. recalls how Brenda would hide the reading manual, causing time to be spent searching the house for the book so lessons could begin.  Clever even at a very young age, Brenda would find unique caches for the book every day.  Mrs. C. recalls being confused that a child bright enough to search out new hiding places couldn’t simply sit down and learn the lessons the book promised would teach her to read! 

Two years invested in homeschooling efforts had yielded a closeness between mother and daughter (as well as an intimate knowledge of all possible hidey-holes in the house!) but had not resulted in Brenda reading and spelling on grade level.  Writing had now joined the list of challenges and became Brenda’s nemesis. 

Brenda’s folks came to me at the Dyslexia Center at the end of Brenda’s fourth-grade year, looking for a different way to approach Brenda’s language instruction.  They enrolled Brenda in small group and tutoring, planning to start at the beginning of fifth grade.  

At ABC, Brenda responded positively to the open and frank discussion of dyslexia that was part of the school culture.  She seemed relieved to put a name to her struggles with language and was happy to know there was an approach to learning that would be successful for her.  One of the specific things Brenda mentioned that encouraged her was the rotating classroom display of accomplished and famous dyslexic people.  Brenda applied herself to learning and understanding the Orton-Gillingham approach lessons presented to her.  Her tutor recalls Brenda being a very hard worker who seemed relieved to learn the generalizations and logic that are hallmarks of the O-G approach. 

After completing her fifth-grade year, Brenda had made a lot of progress. She had learned to make a brainstorm box to write down key ideas she wanted to include in her writing so that creating content was separated from remembering the mechanics and spelling rules that govern writing. Even though she was not finished the program, Brenda felt she had been given the tools she needed to succeed.  She longed to return to XYZ, the school she had attended in first and second grade, feeling her closest friends were there.  Her parents enrolled her in XYZ and arranged for a private O-G trained tutor to come to the school and give Brenda tutoring lessons multiple times per week. The plan felt sound, but it was not a success. 

Brenda was dismayed to realize school XYZ did not have a culture friendly to dyslexic students. She worked extraordinarily hard to earn average grades, but her teacher did not pick up on the fact she was not thriving.  She was not allowed accommodations in the classroom, and the girls she was longing to reconnect with mocked and ridiculed her need for tutoring.  Brenda’s tutoring lessons fell during the classroom math lesson, and the teacher did not alter the schedule. Unsurprisingly, Brenda soon added math to the list of subjects in which she was flagging. Realizing the failure of school XYZ to meet Brenda’s needs, her mom chose to move Brenda back to ABC for her seventh-grade year.  

Having spent a year away from the support system and understanding culture offered by ABC, Brenda now realized what a gift that support and understanding were.  She felt bolstered by the school culture surrounded by students and teachers who understood dyslexia, at least to some degree, and where everyone accepted her. Once again, Brenda had the environment she needed to succeed.  Accommodations prevented Brenda from getting bogged down and behind.  Class notes that were provided to her by each teacher freed Brenda from the burden of trying to listen to the lecture and write the notes at the same time.  She was now able to focus on what the teacher was saying, and her grades and level of understanding soared.  Brenda was able to take advantage of writing tutoring that could be scheduled during her study period, provided by an English teacher who was O-G trained.  Brenda’s family was exposed to continuing education about dyslexia for families.  This gave the entire family a better understanding of dyslexia and how it was impacting Brenda. 

Brenda graduated from ABC as an honors student and a proud member of the school volleyball team. Brenda’s natural willingness to try new things ripened into confidence, even when success in those new endeavors was not guaranteed.  Brenda is now at a small private college studying nursing, and her grades put her on the Dean’s List.  One day, Brenda’s picture could join that rotating display of accomplished dyslexic individuals.  

Brenda’s mom offers some advice to moms of children who exhibit signs of a reading struggle.

  • Know the signs of dyslexia.  
  • Know that frequently a series of small and seemingly unrelated struggles cumulatively point to dyslexia.
  • Get your child tested and start O-G tutoring as young as possible. 
  • Listen to your “mom radar” when things don’t seem to add up in a way that explains your child’s school struggles.
  • Find a school with a culture of acceptance of children who learn differently. 
  • Allow your child to participate in extracurricular activities that interest them – it can’t be ALL about studying. 
  • Know that you can petition for extra time on college entrance exams and that it can make a huge difference to have that extra time. 
  • Encourage your child to ask for and accept help rather than struggle. 
  • Encourage your college-aged child to register for accommodations at university – even if s/he does not plan to use them.  
Teacher Created Materials: Vocabulary Flap Cards

Teacher Created Materials: Vocabulary Flap Cards

There is a certain modest pleasure in being able to create exactly the items your students need. I love a good Teacher Pay Teacher download as much as the next person, but let’s face it, you have to put a whole lot of printing and prepping into those items too! I want to share with you some of the simple but super effective materials for helping individuals with dyslexia. You probably already have 95% of the materials, and if you have 5 minutes and a sharpie pen, you can make these items.

Vocabulary Flap Cards are so awesome, because they address a fundamental but over looked deficit among older dyslexic learners. The students are not reading the hard words. They just aren’t. You as the teacher need to help bridge that gap, and vocabulary flap cards will do just that.

The ideal users of vocabulary flap cards are students advanced enough to have multisyllabic words as part of their texts or assessments. Probably grades 4 and up are the target audience for this method.

Here are the step-by-step directions with pictures! It will take you longer to read the directions than to make one, I promise you.

Start with a 3×5 card, and fold it lengthwise with the lines inside.

Write vocabulary word large inside the card, slightly separating the syllables. 

Cut through the top layer, creating syllable flaps student can raise to read the word by syllables.

On the front top, write the verbatim definition you will use on the test. 

The student reads the long, difficult word by syllable, with assistance at first, and has the definition on the front pointed out to him or her so that extra layer of learning is understood. The student can then practice reading the difficult words and linking them with the definition. It is very helpful to your dyslexic student if you use the verbatim definition as it will appear on the test, since students with dyslexia are not very good at rephrasing under pressure.

Let me know if you use this method, and if it works for your students! The beauty of it is not needing to make a card for every single word in the chapter, just the ones that are difficult for that particular student!

Great 5 Minute Video!

Great 5 Minute Video!

This excellent video was produced by Dyslexia 411’s Kristie Stewart Haas.  It shares important information such as warning signs of dyslexia, enough neurological info to pique curiosity, a message of hope and assurance that specialized teaching methods work, and some thoughts on accommodations.

This wonderful message is told by bright faced, eager students, which made me want to watch it carefully, so I caught each of their messages. Share this with teachers, struggling students who feel alone, and  parents whose children are facing unexpected struggles in school!

Watch the video here here

 

From Struggling Reader to Harvard Grad

From Struggling Reader to Harvard Grad

I love a good David vs Goliath success story, don’t you?  How about one where the difference maker is an elderly teacher who will not give up on a struggling first grade reader, even when she didn’t fully understand what was a the root of the problem?  Sounds like a must-read, right?  Follow the link to read the full story. 

Dyslexic Wonders: Understanding the Daily Life of a Dyslexic

Dyslexic Wonders: Understanding the Daily Life of a Dyslexic

At age 12, Jenny Smith decided she wanted to help other dyslexic kids by writing a book about what it is like to be dyslexic.  Four years and 11 editors later, her book was published.  She soon founded Jenny’s Wish Foundation, which accepts scholarship applications to help individuals with dyslexia get the educational help they need. Read her story, which includes a link where you may go to purchase her book.

Jenny’s story

 

Jay Leno on the gifts of dyslexia

Jay Leno on the gifts of dyslexia

 

I love this story, because it has a bit in it where Jay Leno talks about a teacher suggesting he write down his funny stories and work them into a presentation for the class. That advice helped launch him in a career path, and I bet it gave her 15 minutes of peace and quiet she desperately needed!

Aside from the teacher funny, this is a truly inspirational story of overcoming difficulties through sheer hard work.

Jay Leno interview

Wow! I can do this automatically!

Wow! I can do this automatically!

Sometimes, we really are on autopilot!

Our days are full of things we do without ever thinking about them.  We sign our name.  We cook a familiar recipe.  We drive to an often-visited location. We lock up for the night and get ready for bed.  A part of our brain which knows how these mundane tasks are performed takes over and we slip into automaticity. This is a good thing, because it frees us for other tasks which do require brain power!

Children with dyslexia struggle to put mundane language tasks into the automatic category.  Direct and explicit instruction along with many practice sessions are needed to help the child understand and master a language task.

Dysgraphia

Dysgraphia is confusion with the writing process.  It may be letter formation confusion, inability to write sentences, or a tendency to write sentences out of order so a story does not flow very well.  It is often surprising to read the written work of a dysgraphic child with outstanding storytelling skills, because you are expecting so much more than what you see on paper.

Eric’s story

Eric came to join our second grade small group in January.  This is his writing sample. 

When I look at this writing, I notice the labored letters, the many erasures, the mix of upper and lower case in the alphabet.  My notes tell me the alphabet took Eric three minutes and 23 seconds to complete.  This is a task which probably takes his classmates under 1 minute to correctly complete. We can safely say that writing does not come automatically to Eric.

The path to automaticity

We were making the switch to cursive writing in second grade small group, and Eric tearfully tried his best to form the unfamiliar letters.  A lot of tracing large, tactile letters, airplane writing, tracing in tubs of raw rice and onto bumpy boards helped clarify in his mind the way each letter was to be formed.  Eric is a master story teller, and often made up stories for the group about what was happening to “the guy” whose path our letter traced.  The effort payed off, Eric’s tears dried up and he began to smile as the cursive notebooks were passed out.  Recently, each lower case letter was mastered and we moved to capitals.

Success!

This is a recent writing sample, about three months the first one,  from Eric’s journal.  The alphabet took him 57 seconds to complete, as as you can see, it is legible  and all in cursive lower case letters. There were a couple of errors, but overall, a big improvement!

Below the alphabet are letters I called out in random order for the students to write down.  This mini-quiz shows me which letters are not yet automatic for each child.  Eric wrote all of his with no erasures!  He has hit the automatic gravy train!

The sentence at the bottom of the work is an example of why cursive writing is great for kids with dyslexia.  If you look at his earlier work, all the words crowd together without spaces between.  This is another characteristic of dysgraphia, called word boundary issues.  Cursive writing helps this problem because the letters within the word are connected, but there is a break between each word.  An instant reminder to give it a little space.

After successfully writing the page above, Eric smiled his endearing, crooked smile as he shyly told me, “ Wow! I can do this automatically!” Yup, that is the goal for each child.

Accomplishing the technically impossible

Accomplishing the technically impossible

Aerodynamically, the bumblebee shouldn’t be able to fly. But the bumblebee doesn’t know that, so it goes on flying anyway. ~Mary Kay Ash

I love it when my students surprise themselves and me by doing things which we didn’t know they would be able to do!  This quote reminds not to limit what they may be able to accomplish.