Pangit,
I have dyslexic kiddos too. Our 8 year old was formally diagnosed and he receives special Orton Gillingham tutoring 2 days per week. Our 10 year old shows signs of dyslexia, but she has not been formally tested. Dictation does not work unless the words, phrases, or sentences follow the rules already taught. Just pulling random sentences from a reading passage will only frustrate and discourage the child.
I am using AAS with the 10 year old and it’s slow going. She actually reads at a post high school level, but is an absolute terrible speller. She transposes letters and numbers. She’s very inconsistent, especially with copywork. Today in her science narration, she wrote “nectot” in one sentence and then spelled “nectar” correctly in the next. She is not sloppy or lazy, she really has a learning glitch. For math, she will tell me the answer is “5” and then turn around and write “8”. She knows it’s wrong and sometimes will erase and rewrite “8” again, and again, and again…. It’s just like her brain gets stuck and she can’t go forward. My heart breaks becauses she has such a sweet spirit, but writing and spelling are just so hard for her 🙁
I’m not sure how much you know about dyslexia, but the Orton-Gillingham method is the absolute best method for teaching dyslexics. It’s very important to present information in a multi sensory way! I think this is part of why there’s success with the AAS letter tiles. It’s the kinesthetic motion of moving the tiles that helps solidify the words in the brain. In tutoring, our son writes letters and words in a sand tray, shaving cream, with magnetic letters, on a dry erase board, etc. He seems to do better writing with an ink pen rather than pencil. There’s something about the feel on the paper. He’s learned a method called COPS when writing. For example, he’s able to do some very simple dictation based on words that he’s learned. Let’s say, “Ben got a big fish at the pond.” He writes it on paper while saying and sounding out what he’s writing. Then we send in the COPS to check it. “C” is to check for capitalization. “O” is overall appearance. (spacing, height of letters, etc.) “P” is punctuation. “S” is spelling. He then crosses out any errors and rewrites it correctly. Again, he must say outloud the sounds he is writing.
Copywork can be painful for him. Although, I love the idea. He’s just starting with very short passages and he’s not able to copy directly from the book. I need to write or type it out for him. Too much on a page gets very confusing.
There is some really good information here regarding dyslexia….
http://www.dys-add.com/dyslexia.html
Also Denise Eide, author of Logic of English, has free videos that are very helpful…
http://www.logicofenglish.com/resources/videos
I really didn’t see anything with spelling click until this year with AAS Level 3. I’m undecided if we’re going to stick with AAS next year or switch to Logic of English. I think they’re both great programs. But, I sometimes wonder if AAS is a bit too slow?
Anyway, hope this helps. If you really want to try dication, stick with the AAS passages and hold off on the random sentences.
Blessings,
Melissa
http://reflectionsfromdrywoodcreek.blogspot.com/