You have just described my daughter, lunatic. We actually had discussions with the school about holding her back a year too. So I definitely feel your pain. My daughter is now in the second grade and she continues to march to her own drummer...which is also art, btw but we have seen a great deal of improvement.
She attended summer school and at the end of it all, the teacher told me "Everyone is ready for 1st grade but Finny" Forget all of the mother guilt/expectations things that went along with that. We approached the summerschool option at that age as a great honor to be invited so we could protect her ego.
We tried hooked on phonics, but Amanda was just not interested...part of it was that she just wasn't ready, I think, and pushing it made her frustrated. I had to work very hard to keep my frustration (and fear that she wouldn't learn to read or would fail in school) from showing.
She had a great teacher for first grade....When Amanda started, she was still unsure of the letters and wrote many of them backwards. I had a conference with the teacher where I told her that I was afraid she would never learn to read. A few weeks later, Amanda came home reading her first book 8O
The teacher used a whole language approach mixed later with the sounding it out. I was not an advocate of this approach until I saw it in action. Basically, the kids memorized several easy words. They had a book where the words were written.
Example:
and the cat hat and hat cat the
etc, etc.
Each page had several words repeated over and over again. Each night, the kids had homework to read the page 3 times. When they were successfully able to 'read' that page, they went on to the next. The pages got more detailed and eventually sentences started:
The cat ate the rat.
The rat ate the hat.
etc,.....
And then before you knew it, they were reading a little story about a cat and a hat.....
The sounding it out stuff and rules came later after the children had built up their confidence and had gained some intuitive understanding of the way that the words sounded.
Amanda went from getting Title 1 help in first grade to testing at grade 3.4 reading level last week. She is now a pretyy avid reader.
Our concern now is for math. She continues to struggle at each new level. She will finally 'get' the addition only to be confounded by subtraction...and then she'll master that only to be back to square one with telling time or fractions. It is very frustrating..We've actually got her first grade teacher now as a tutor for her weekly because it became too big of an issue in the house....everyone was frustrated.
She was 'offered' summer school for her math this summer, but we declined. She will continue to work with her teacher from last year and we will do things with her at home.
There have been some concerns raised about the possiblity of dyslexia or other learning disabilities with Amanda.....perhaps her talents just lie in music and art .....
kris
PS..regarding hooked on phonics...We tried it out and I think that it is a really good program. I'd definitiely consider it.
One of the best parts of that program is a computer game where they have to identify letters and words...it is a slow progression from letter sounds to whole words and my daughter was always overjoyed when she made it to the next level.
kris
She attended summer school and at the end of it all, the teacher told me "Everyone is ready for 1st grade but Finny" Forget all of the mother guilt/expectations things that went along with that. We approached the summerschool option at that age as a great honor to be invited so we could protect her ego.
We tried hooked on phonics, but Amanda was just not interested...part of it was that she just wasn't ready, I think, and pushing it made her frustrated. I had to work very hard to keep my frustration (and fear that she wouldn't learn to read or would fail in school) from showing.
She had a great teacher for first grade....When Amanda started, she was still unsure of the letters and wrote many of them backwards. I had a conference with the teacher where I told her that I was afraid she would never learn to read. A few weeks later, Amanda came home reading her first book 8O
The teacher used a whole language approach mixed later with the sounding it out. I was not an advocate of this approach until I saw it in action. Basically, the kids memorized several easy words. They had a book where the words were written.
Example:
and the cat hat and hat cat the
etc, etc.
Each page had several words repeated over and over again. Each night, the kids had homework to read the page 3 times. When they were successfully able to 'read' that page, they went on to the next. The pages got more detailed and eventually sentences started:
The cat ate the rat.
The rat ate the hat.
etc,.....
And then before you knew it, they were reading a little story about a cat and a hat.....
The sounding it out stuff and rules came later after the children had built up their confidence and had gained some intuitive understanding of the way that the words sounded.
Amanda went from getting Title 1 help in first grade to testing at grade 3.4 reading level last week. She is now a pretyy avid reader.
Our concern now is for math. She continues to struggle at each new level. She will finally 'get' the addition only to be confounded by subtraction...and then she'll master that only to be back to square one with telling time or fractions. It is very frustrating..We've actually got her first grade teacher now as a tutor for her weekly because it became too big of an issue in the house....everyone was frustrated.
She was 'offered' summer school for her math this summer, but we declined. She will continue to work with her teacher from last year and we will do things with her at home.
There have been some concerns raised about the possiblity of dyslexia or other learning disabilities with Amanda.....perhaps her talents just lie in music and art .....
kris
PS..regarding hooked on phonics...We tried it out and I think that it is a really good program. I'd definitiely consider it.
One of the best parts of that program is a computer game where they have to identify letters and words...it is a slow progression from letter sounds to whole words and my daughter was always overjoyed when she made it to the next level.
kris
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