Welcome To A Teacher In Your Corner

Before I began teaching,I spent my evenings tutoring my son who had a learning disability. I had no teaching material and so learned to use things out of my kitchen to teach the concept. When I began teaching,I continued to use household items to illustrate the lesson. This site will give you ideas on how to use everyday items to help your child master a difficult concept.

Whether you are home-schooling or just helping your child complete homework, this site will be helpful.
Showing posts with label ADHD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ADHD. Show all posts

The ABCs of Spelling

I taught first grade.  In kindergarten they have learned the letters and sounds.  In first grade they are expected to use them to spell words.  More times than I can count I heard a parent say, "We work on spelling every night and he just doesn't get it." 

When I asked how they studied I usually heard something like, "I call out the words and he writes them."  Sorry parents--that's a test not studying.  I was recently contacted by a relative who was on the verge of pulling her hair out.  Her grandson is very intelligent, but is easily distracted and struggles with long term memory.  Spelling was, in her words, 'eating their lunch'.  She told me that his daddy usually gave him a bath and they used shower crayons to write the words on the wall around the tub.  Great idea.  Here are some of the suggestions I made.

Begin on the first night the list comes home.  Verrryyy important.  Don't wait until the night before the test.  On the first night call out the entire list of words--ONCE.  The words he or she gets right the first time should be put aside and reviewed the night before the test.  This allows you to focus on the words that were misspelled.  Don't waste time reviewing words that he already knows.  Now when you review the difficult words, do it in a fun way.  Break the difficult words into bite size lists.  
  • Focus on five or ten words every night.  Continue studying any word the student is still struggling with every night. The night before the test, review all the words.
  • Be sure the child is engaged in the activity, especially if there is an attention problem.   If he likes the computer, let him type the list.   Use Word which with underline misspelled words in red. 
  • If he likes chalk, use it. 
  • If he is a tactile learner, pour cornmeal in a plastic container with a lid.  Allow the child to 'write' the words with his fingers in the cornmeal.  As he writes in the cornmeal, you 'draw' the word on his back with your finger.  When finished, put the lid on the container and save it for next time.  
  • Use colored markers.  
  • Say the word the way it is spelled rather than the correct pronunciation. I taught my students to spell Wednesday by saying, "We say Wenesday, but it is spelled wed-nes-day.  When I say Wensday you think and write wed-nes-day."  It worked.  I had students tell me years after they left my class, they still spelled it by writing wed-nes-day.  The word friend should be taught as fry-end. 
  • If your child does all he can do and still struggles, accept it.  Not everybody can spell.  I tell parents "That's why God made spell-check".  The world will not come to an end because your child can't spell.  Do you work at it?  Absolutely.  But do NOT allow it to become a stumbling block for your child.  Correct spelling is not worth an ulcer for anyone.




Distracted Child

Have you ever tried to help a distracted child do homework?  It is maddening.  You finally get him to sit down, hand him the pencil, and the next time you look, he's balancing with the pencil on his nose.  You put the pencil back in his hand, pull the paper closer to him, and he tries to blow the paper across the table without touching it.  You threaten.  You plead.  You beg.  You scream.  You cry.  Nothing helps.  Why?  Because his mind is moving faster than yours and he is not interested in doing the homework.  

Here are a few strategies that might help.  
  • Homework must be worth his time.  How?  He needs to see the homework as a means to an end.  Before he can play his electronic games, he must finish his homework.  Before he can watch television, he must finish his homework.  (Do not turn program on in background.  He will find a way to watch it.)  
  • If you are helping him gain skills instead of doing homework, make it a game.  Make up games using cards, dominoes, or pennies.  Involved a sibling so the struggling student doesn't feel  targeted.
  • Use an old fashioned egg timer.  There is something about that tick, tick, tick, that keeps his mind on track.
  • Break homework up into bite size pieces.  If the project is due in three weeks, work on it a little every day.  If the Spelling test is on Friday, work on a few words every night, repeating only the ones that he has trouble spelling.
  • Some students get overwhelmed when the work looks too long.  If the math page is too long, fold it in half so the child is only looking at half as many problems.  If the reading page is long, use an envelope under the line the child is reading.  This helps his eyes track the line and hides the rest of the page.
I hope these simple steps help your child complete his homework and you maintain your sanity.