dyslexia: writing

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Picture It

Dyslexics are in the main visual thinkers. Most knowledge and thoughts are stored as pictures or in image form and time is needed to translate these into words.  People with dyslexia typically forget what they hear and are poor auditory learners, however, they remember what they see and once something is known it is not […]

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Analysing spellings: metacognition

  Whilst there are many creative approaches to teaching, spelling has not benefited from this in the past. How has spelling been taught historically in your school? Typically, spelling is not taught at all but delivered as lists, sent home to ‘look, cover, write and check’ and to be tested at the end of the

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To my teachers: from an adult dyslexic

      Here are some thoughts from @creativeartJan on helping her school age self: Give me the information/learning in advance, so I can plan ahead and be prepared. Provide a list of key vocabulary. Give worksheets and books with clear, large font. Give examples where support for homework can be found and include alternatives

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Handwriting: ‘we write not with the fingers but with the whole person’.

  What does the title quote tell us about handwriting and the act of writing? The quote, from Orlando (Virginia Woolf), goes on: ‘The nerve which controls the pen winds itself about every fibre of our being, threads the heart, pierces the liver’. The act of writing is both emotional and physical and is THE

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Fantastic Contractions and how to find them!

https://twitter.com/thinkpix_suze/status/1048191722268893184?s=21 Arrrrrrgh what’s a contraction??????? Question: how can I give a concrete meaning to this abstract word? Is there a real life application? Kinaesthetic/experiential (aka primary information): ask students to hold up their arm – when outstretched, the muscle is longer (antonym: expansion). Tense the fist and bend the arm, feel the muscle; it is

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