Thursday, September 13, 2007

The Fonz talks up reading in Bridgeport

Here's another great article about one man's realization that he has dyslexia. Remember the Fonz? In, The Fonz talks up reading in Bridgeport, he recalls his own, nothing like his TV show, tough school days.

This article is from the Connecticut Post, 11 Sept, 2007.

I cried with relief to hear I was dyslexic


To read a great personal account by an adult diagnosed with dyslexia later in life, check out, I cried with relief to hear I was dyslexic. Derry Ann Morgan, 48, says, "I couldn't concentrate, and I had terrible trouble learning my spellings and tables. I was a nervous child. I took everything seriously, and I was desperate to succeed. But the harder I tried, the less well I seemed to do."
Her children show signs of dyslexia too but now she feels better able to advise them, "The children are brilliant in their way. They see the world differently, but the disability creates ability in other ways. Gary has phenomenal spatial skills. He's brilliant at making things, as is Niall. And Emma is a wonderful artist."

The article is from the Irish Independent newspaper, Monday September 10 2007

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Downloading audiobooks from itunes

If you've just been given your reading list for for school or college don't forget that you can download audiobooks from itunes for about $15 a pop.

Other things you might want to consider:
1.Check to see if your school or college disability unit can help you. Maybe they loan out ipods and/or can buy the book?
2. At Costco you can buy a $50 itunes card for $45 (you save $5).
3. Maybe someone who likes you will buy you an itunes gift voucher (since this is an educational need).

Wednesday, August 1, 2007

scholarships and internships

Here are a couple of websites I came across. I can't vouch for them but they seem worth a look.

-For a search of college scholarships check out http://www.fastweb.com">www.fastweb.com
-For internships for students with disabilities in Science, Engineering, Mathematics, Computer Science, and some fields of Business check out the Entry Point program at http://ehrweb.aaas.org/entrypoint/

Thursday, July 5, 2007

Tips for comprehension and vocab

I just received some questions from a student about comprehension and vocab so here are the short tips I gave him:

Q I have a hard time with authors purpose and compare this to that.
A Do you have a list of possible answers ie persuasion, explanation, humor? A list is helpful because you can talk about it with a friend and act the common ones out so they stick in your mind better. With compare/contrast type questions be sure you know you'res looking for 'same as' and 'different' (and key words are words like "likewise" and "similarly", and "by contrast". When I teach this I usually say really simple things like, “I am wearing pants and similarly you are” or “I’m short, by contrast, you’re tall” and I get my student to say some of his own examples (real easy ones) and we act them out where we can (sitting/standing, in/out).

Q My knowledge of vocab words is also really low
A Vocab can be hard because you want to discover new words naturally but how often do we really consider vocab except in school books? I usually start thinking about vocab by discussing the advantage of having good vocab ie when you know big words you look smart! Then we find words we don’t know and want to know, practice spelling them, thinking up any handy ways of remembering them, then using them in sentences (orally). Then we pick the hardest 5 to save. I have students explain them again and write them out again . They take them with them, or I keep them, and we review them next session. Oh, and any novel ways you can think of to remember them, the better. Acting out is good, also drawing things in and around the word and thinking of your own experiences or people the word describes ie My mom’s frugal!. When you spell the word, look out for tricky syllables and highlight them, eg in/CES/sant.

Q If the teacher says turn to page 263 in your book, read to page 266 and do problems 1-5...I can't remember it all.
A A quick review of note taking would help you. In this example you would jot down something like:
Pg 263
2 266
pr 1-5
You might have fun thinking up your own creative/bizarre/artistic shorthand.

Tuesday, July 3, 2007

Dyslexia - How does it feel?

It's summer vacation, and my family is pretty new to the area, so today we went exploring. I'm driving the car and my daughter is navigating: -M is for me, D is for my daughter.
D- "Oh God Mom, I'm so bad at this, who knows where we'll end up? We've got plenty of gas haven't we?"
M- "You'll be fine, you'll soon get the hang of it."
M- "Harvey St, do you see it?. We're on Main and we just crossed Harvey."
D- "No."
M- "OK, Kelley, do you see Kelley?"
D- "Nope."
M-"Rowley?"
D- "No."
M-"What about Maple, we're crossing Maple, it's a big one, it MUST be there."
D- "It's not here, none of them are here! And the stupid page splits just where I need to see the road and of course there's this big box obliterating just about anything worth seeing."
M- "South, honey, we're going South. Are you sure you're not looking North?"
D- "Oh, THAT South, well would you look at that! Rowley did you say? Yup, it's here now. -Mom, can you imagine how hard this would be if I had dyslexia on top of how difficult this already is?"
And of course I don't suppose I could really image it at all. I help people with dyslexia every day but I'm not dyslexic and am always moved anew by the personal accounts my students give me. They say things like, " It's incredibly frustrating. I can read fine but my writing looks like a small kids. I can't spot my mistakes and then when someone points them out to me they seem so obvious and basic." "I make a joke of my dyslexia because I have to. My kids help me out a lot when I have to write something." "I hated school because I couldn't keep up with the books but I got along by being smart in other ways. I couldn't read or write much but I'm a great talker. When I left I even got a job delivering mail. I memorized names and street codes, I amazed even myself."
Dyslexia. How does it feel?

Friday, June 29, 2007

Using ipods to help reading fluency

I came upon this great blog by a computer whiz who's explaining to less wired-up reading teachers how we can use ipods in class. I'm sure all manner of adaptations are feasible and intend to try some.

Update:
A site you can join to download audiobooks onto your ipod, or onto your computer for direct listening or downloading in segments onto your ipod, is www.audible.com. It costs around $14 a month with a cheaper rate for the first 3 months. Advantage=you can get all the latest titles.
For loaning CDs and DVDs don't forget your library. They have catalogues and you can order titles that aren't currently on their shelves. Advantage= it's free.