Orton Gillingham Materials. Workbook with 100 Activities to Improve Writing and Reading Skills in Children with Dyslexia. Volume 2. 7-9 Years. Black and White Edition


Book Description

Orton Gillingham Materials. Workbook with 100 activities to improve writing and reading skills in children with dyslexia. Volume 2. 7-9 Years. Black & White Edition. In this book you will find activities to ... Identify words that begin with a certain letter Solve jumbled word puzzles Rearrange jumbled sentences Combine two sentences using the correct conjunction Write the given word, find it in a word search, identify it in a text Find certain letters in a text Rewrite sentences by correcting confusing letters The Orton Gillingham approach is a methodology that is made available to educators to expand their available options to help the child with dyslexia to read and write. The Orton Gillingham methodology enables educators to develop and implement a structured, individualized, and multisensory teaching plan. In this book the educator, teacher and parents will have sufficient resources and activities to help the child with dyslexia improve his reading and writing. The Orton Gillingham methodology must be put into practice by an educator who has received training in the subject, however parents of dyslexic children can complement the work done by professionals with books like the one you have here.




Orton Gillingham Spelling for Kids with Dyslexia


Book Description

This workbook includes activities to spell out the name of a given picture, write the missing letters, identify the correct word, unjumble the letters and rearrange the letters of a given word.




Orton Gillingham Decodable Readers: Let's Practice Long and Short Vowels. Workbook with Decodable Texts to Help Struggling Readers to Improve Their Reading Skills. Black and White Edition. Volume 2


Book Description

Orton Gillingham Decodable Readers: let's practice long and short vowels. Workbook with decodable texts to help struggling readers to read. Black & White Edition. Volume 2. The "decodable readers" are books that are contrived to support kids practice a particular letter-sound pattern shown as part of a synthetic phonics curriculum. Books like this have no storyline; they are equally nonsensical whether you begin on the first page, or start on the last page and read backward. A book must be worth reading and provide kids the chance to discover the full spectrum of strategies needed to understand any book. In this book, we have included texts for the student to read and identify certain words within it. You will find that after each text the child is asked questions so that he not only focuses on reading but also on understanding and retaining certain data that the text teaches us. The book is reinforced with other activities that break the monotony and make it fun and challenging for the child, such as identifying the name of the given picture making sentences with the given word finding certain words in a word search and crossword puzzles. In this book we work on the letter 'e' Short 'e' ...................................page 1-17 Long 'e' (ee words).....................page 18-28 Long 'e' (ea words)....................page 29-40 Long 'e' (y words)......................page 41-50 Long 'e' (ey words).....................page 51-61 Long 'e' (e words).......................page 62-72 Long 'e' words activities................page 73-77 Resources..................................page 78-114 Look for other BrainChild titles available on Amazon.com




The Squiggle Code (Letters Make Words)


Book Description

The Squiggle Code Books are easy for parents to use, fun for kids, and follow the science of learning to read. With lots of printable games, flashcards, and other materials that can be downloaded from www.dogonalogbooks.com, this series was created to be economical for families and teachers. All DOG ON A LOG Books follow a systematic, structured literacy/Orton-Gillingham based phonics sequence. This book guides parents and teachers in teaching letters, blending, and the beginning or reading. Trying to find a way to teach your child to read, whether you are supplementing what your child is being taught in school or as a homeschooling family, can feel overwhelming. DOG ON A LOG Pup Books are written by a mom who wants to try and eliminate some of those feelings for other parents. These parent-friendly books will guide you along the path of teaching reading. DOG ON A LOG Pup Books give simple activities you can do with your child. Once you understand the skills that your child needs to learn, you may wish to add additional activities. Resources are suggested that will help you find additional free or low-cost activities you can personalize to your child. Book 1: Before the Squiggle Code (A Roadmap to Reading) starts at the very beginning of the learning to read process: it helps the learner hear the smallest sounds in words. Relevant excerpts from Teaching a Struggling Reader: One Mom's Experience with Dyslexia are also included to help parents with children who are struggling to read. Book 2: The Squiggle Code (Letters Make Words) helps the learner discover that each sound has a letter or letters and when the letters are put together, they make words. This is when reading begins. Book 3 Kids' Squiggles (Letters Make Words) The stories from The Squiggle Code are formatted with pictures and less words per page so they are less intimidating to new readers. DOG ON A LOG Pup Books teach phonological and phonemic awareness skills.




Blast Off to Reading!


Book Description

Blast Off to Reading is a complete reading program for those students who have dyslexia or for those who simply struggle to read. This Orton-Gillingham based program will systematically take your student from the most basic units of sounds to multi-syllable, complex words in 50 lessons. Each lesson is created to include a new sound or rule and a reading task followed by several exercises, which review concepts taught in that lesson as well as those taught previously. This provides the perfect blend of reading and writing, with review, while the student learns to become aware of sounds and how they are put together to form words. After every ten lessons is a review section to further go over concepts just learned. This full colored program, with its large text and layout is created to be visually appealing to children. This Program Includes: 1. A section on how to combat letter and number reversals. 2. Supplemental lists in the back of the book for older students who have larger vocabularies. 3. On-line spelling drills, for the dictation portion of the lessons. 4. Flash Cards (available at the author's website).




Which Way?


Book Description

For page samples, follow the link: https://books.lidiastanton.com/whichway This colourful and highly engaging resource is written for children as young as 4-5 years old but also those in Key Stage 2 of primary school (up to 9 years old) who continue to feel confused by letter and digit shapes. The latter group might become so discouraged that they avoid writing, or write very little, despite having great imaginations. They start doubting their ability to simply 'know' the correct way when writing b/d, p/q, p/g, 9/g, 6/9, s/z, 5/S, S/3, etc. Most teachers and parents are very good at playing down the reversals and encouraging the child to have another go. They say, "It's fine, it's still good writing. I love what you've written here." Yet, after so many attempts and after so many teacher corrections on the page, the child begins to think, "This writing game might not be for me after all". Those with dyslexia will have additional phonological difficulties to manage alongside poor memory for graphic shapes. This workbook is for children who can trace well at speed, thus appear to have developed adequate motor memory in their fingers, yet struggle to remember 'which way' to write the letter or digit. It is very likely that they will be ready to integrate this type of linear visual-spatial information at a later time. For now, they have no real-life representation, or model, of a handful of graphic shapes in their brains, and this, in turn, can affect their confidence in writing independently. This resource offers practical and long-term 'tricks' that will trigger the child's memory at the right moment. It adopts a complementary approach to traditional letter formation teaching to bridge the gap between children who are proficient graphic writers and those whose brains make different sense of graphic information. Many children with dyslexia and dysgraphia will particularly benefit from completing the workbook. How to use the resource The child doesn't need to work through the entire book. Choose sections that are relevant to their needs. Younger children (aged 4-6) will almost certainly need assistance when working with the resource, although older ones will no doubt choose to work independently, showing their practised strategies and completed activities to teachers and parents. It is recommended that section 7 (Use your whole body) is attempted with the help of an older helper or adult. There are more than one method to help distinguish between b/d/p and s/z in this workbook. Introduce the child to only one method at a time, evaluate the child's progress, and decide whether there is a need to move on to the next one. Some children are more practical than visual - the 'Use your hands' strategy might be sufficient for them. Other children might enjoy more visual strategies in sections 4, 5 and 6. In my experience, section 7 (Use your whole body) works well with children who need to 'experience' concepts in a multi-sensory manner. Pay attention to the child's initial response to a particular method. It will guide you along. You can mix and match strategies. Some children don't confuse b/d as much but struggle with p/9. Some activities can be completed independently of the section the child is currently working through. For example, Activity 7 can be attempted after completing the 'Use your hands' section. Flick through the book to decide which activities appear to be suitable to the child's current progress.




Decodable Workbook for Kids Ages 6 - 7


Book Description

Looking for a solution to help your struggling reader in grade 1? Look no further than our Decodable Workbook! This workbook is specifically designed to assist children who may have difficulty reading and sounding out words, particularly those confusing letters like b, d, p, and q, and similar-sounding letters like d, t, b, p, f, and v.This workbook is designed for struggling readers in grade 1 and focuses solely on decodable words, teaching reading at the word level, including letters that look similar (such as b, d, p, and q), and letters with similar sounds (such as d, t, b, p, f, and v).This book includes: 8 Activity packets for each letter. Step 1: Reading and tracing the letter Step 2: Tracing and writing simple sentences Step 3: Finding the missing sound Step 4: Circling the sound Step 5: Finding the correct words Step 6: Tracing, writing, and coloring the comic letters Step 7: Marking the appropriate box to show where the letter is in the word (beginning, middle, or end) Step 8: Reading list of 44 decodable wordsKids will enjoy exploring various phonics games, word associations, matching, cheerful illustrations, and coloring comic alphabets make it easier for kids to remember sight words rather than just memorizing them, which can be a powerful tool when reading.Whether your child is in preschool or grade school, a struggling reader, reluctant, or simply needs a little push in the right direction, you will find this book helpful.




Orton Gillingham Decodable Readers


Book Description

Dyslexia is a learning disability of neurobiological origin, which causes seem to be in the development and structuring of certain brain structures. Dyslexia is therefore a condition that causes the brain to process information differently, making it difficult for the person to understand letters, their sounds, their combinations, etc. I have created in this book a multitude of texts that the child can read and then ask questions or propose activities related to it. I have also included activities that will help the child identify certain words. In this book you will find activities related to the digraphs 'lk', 'ft', 'lt', 'rt', 'nt', 'st' and many other activities that will help improve reading speed, comprehension and writing skills.




Decodable Phonics Passages for Kindergarten


Book Description

This book is a set of 30 reading passages with comprehension questions appropriate for kindergarten students, focusing only on decodable words and teaching struggling readers at the word level, including all decodable texts that focus on phonics skills.In these phases, 1, 2, 3, children will learn the sounds that letters make (phonemes). There are 30 sounds in all, 15 of which are made with one letter, and the 15 most common two-letter sounds.Although the order in which sounds are taught will depend on which scheme your child's school follows, this book begins with a specific order. It starts with the most commonly used phonemes and progresses to more complex ones, including letters with similar sounds and letters that look similar, like/b/d/p/q/u/v/w/f/t/m/n/br/pl/dr/ph/sp/sc, and so on.This book includes:Each phoneme letter has six steps (six pages) in activity packets for struggling readers, including the Orton Gillingham approach.Text-Based Questions - Students will refer back to the text to answer three questions per story and write the sight words found in the same story.Sight Words - All passages include common kindergarten and first-grade sight words.Skill Application - Each passage includes skill activities such as:Writing sight words found in the storyReading and tracing the letterFinding the correct wordsCircle the soundFilling in the missing lettersMaking sentencesColoring phoneme letters, and more!




Quest for a Grump Grunt Chapter Book


Book Description

Finally, a delightful book series that helps kids learn phonics rules step by step. Fun and engaging books designed for anyone learning to read with phonics, especially learners with dyslexia. Start anywhere in the series, according to your child's reading level. "Let us go on a quest," Dave says. "A quest? What kind of quest?" Quin asks. "A quest for a grump grunt," Dave says. Sight Words: a, are, as, be, come, comes, could, do, does, for, from, go, goes, has, have, he, her, here, I, into, is, my, of, onto, or, put, puts, say, says, see, sees, she, should, their, there, they, to, walk, want, wants, we, what, where, would, you, your Approximately 1,930 total words This is a Step 7 Chapter book. The DOG ON A LOG Books series are for phonics readers and folks with a dyslexic learning style. They are Decodable books which means a learner who has been taught the phonics rules and the limited sight words in that book can sound them out and read them. They are Systematic because one Step of books follows another. The words used reflect the inclusion of 1 to 3 new phonics rules in each Step. Each Step of books builds on the skills practiced in the prior Steps. There are five books at each Step. The chapter books are written in a chapter format with one picture in most chapters. They are longer, have more detail, and sometimes offer more complexity than the Let's GO! Books. They're great for practicing known and newly introduced phonics rules. They're also just fun reading. DOG ON A LOG Let's GO! Books are shorter versions of DOG ON A LOG Chapter books. Let's GO! books tell the same stories with about 8 pictures and only a few sentences per page. They're perfect as an introduction to the new phonics rules or simply for fun reading for younger kids. Most kids who read DOG ON A LOG Books are over-the-moon-proud that they can finally read a book without so much frustration. This builds confidence in new and struggling readers. Their parents are excited that, along with reading sight words, their kids can decode every word on every page. With each progressing Step the readers gain more confidence as the vocabulary, grammar, and stories become more complex and they see their skills and abilities growing with the books. DOG ON A LOG Phonics Progression Step 1 Consonants, primary sounds Short vowels Digraphs: ch, sh, th, wh, ck 2 and 3 sound words Possessive 's Step 2 Bonus letters (f, l, s, z after short vowel) "all" -s suffix Step 3 ang, ing, ong, ung, ank, ink, onk, unk Step 4 Consonant Blends to make 4 sound words 3 and 4 sound words ending in -lk, -sk Step 5 Digraph blends -nch to make 3 and 4 sound words Silent e, including "-ke" Step 6 ild, old, olt, ind, ost Step 7 5 sounds in a closed syllable word plus suffix -s (crunch, slumps) 3 letter blends and up to 6 sounds in a closed syllable word (script, spring) Step 8 Two syllable words with 2 closed syllables, not blends (sunset, chicken, unlock) Paperbacks have black and white images. The books are optimized for learners with dyslexia. They have cream colored paper and 22 point Verdana font. Research has shown Verdana is one of the most dyslexia-friendly fonts. WATCH FOR MORE STEPS AND BOOKS COMING SOON