Hi Des,
I’m thinking the easiest way to see if it is just the novelty of the white board that has his attention and not the ideas found in the lesson is to have a few lessons without it. Have a coin bag on hand with dimes and pennies, and give him orally some of the simple story sums found in the book (always feel free to change names to reflect people he knows, his own interests). Change the manipulative to beans (or craft sticks/ten bundles if he is above 10) and give him some more simple sums orally. Is he working these with ease with the manipulatives? Working them with ease without the manipulatives?
I’m also wondering how he is with handwriting in general? If he is writing with ease enough to handle written narration rather than oral narrations then he is probably able to not lose the idea or importance of the math lesson with writing sums. Do you see how CM’s methods correlate here? Work was mainly oral throughout elementary arithmetic and other subjects in order to build attention, accuracy, concentration and clear thinking, etc. as well as to not have ideas overshadowed by the act of writing.
Do you mind telling me where you are in the scope and sequence? Is he in the explorative stage of number, building comfort working on them (pp. 23-29 in the handbook) or is he further on, learning his addition table (pp. 29-30)? Have you the dvd’s or watched the sample lessons?
Best,
Richele