bookmate game
Beth Ellen Nash

Dyslexia Outside-the-Box

Notify me when the book’s added
To read this book, upload an EPUB or FB2 file to Bookmate. How do I upload a book?
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    Prewriting
    ° Brainstorm using mind maps, lists, etc.
    ° Select your topic: What is the subject of my writing?
    ° Determine your audience: Who will read the writing? What are their needs, biases, and prior knowledge?
    ° Determine your purpose: Why am I writing? What is my goal?
    ° Select your writing type: What type of writing is appropriate for this piece?
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    top 1,000 most frequently used words make up 90 percent of written English, and the top 3,000 make up 97 percent.
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    Orton-Gillingham phonics-based approach
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    Davis Sweep-Sweep-Spell strategy
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    Games to play to expand vocabulary:
    ° Rummy Roots™ vocabulary-building games teach Latin and Greek word roots borrowed by the English language.
    ° A fun, free resource for vocabulary building is www.freerice.com.
    ° Play various matching games using synonyms and antonyms to build vocabulary, such as Concentration, Old Maid, and Go Fish.
    ° Use any generic board game and move one space for each synonym or antonym a player can give for the vocabulary word-card that is drawn.
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    The Davis Picture-at-Punctuation strategy encourages students to use their strong picture-thinking skills to create a picture in their mind each time they reach a punctuation mark. This is to ensure that they understand what’s been read.
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    Students should master all five areas of reading: phonological and phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension.
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    Thomas West’s book In The Mind’s Eye: Creative Visual Thinkers, Gifted Dyslexics, and the Rise of Visual Technologies
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    l Strong social skills and high levels of empathy
    l Excellent big-picture thinkers
    l Good at making connections
    l Three-dimensional thinking
    l Strong narrative reasoning
    l Inaccurate and/or non-fluent word recognition
    l Poor spelling and decoding abilities
    l Difficulty with organization of sounds to process language
    l Slow or inaccurate reading, including mixing up similar words
    l Poor written composition
    l Difficulty understanding math word problems
  • aliazulkiflihas quoted5 years ago
    Consider the differences between the two sides of the chart on the following page – flip-side strengths on the left compared to deficits on the right.
    Flip-Side-Strengths Perspective2
    Deficits Perspective3
    l Good problem solvers
    l Creative
    l Observant
fb2epub
Drag & drop your files (not more than 5 at once)