AdultAdolescenceChildhoodEarly Childhood
Programs

Programs & Projects

The Institute is a catalyst for advancing a comprehensive national literacy agenda.

[LearningDisabilities 2509] Re: Question

Lucille Cuttler

l.cuttler at comcast.net
Wed Oct 29 11:37:34 EDT 2008


Betsy - thank you! I'm passing along this link to others. This is new to
me - and maybe to others as well. You're a gem. Lucille
-----Original Message-----
From: learningdisabilities-bounces at nifl.gov
[mailto:learningdisabilities-bounces at nifl.gov]On Behalf Of Betsy
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 6:03 PM
To: 'The Learning Disabilities Discussion List'
Subject: [LearningDisabilities 2506] Re: Question


Shannie, Check out this website for a good program based on the
Orton-Gillingham multisensory approach. This is the best price I have seen
for this program. It is appropriate for adults as well. Patterns for
Success in Reading and Spelling by Nancy C. Redding and Marcia K. Henry.
http://rlac.com/store/Patterns-for-Success-in-Reading-and-Spelling.html



Betsy Gauss






----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--

From: learningdisabilities-bounces at nifl.gov
[mailto:learningdisabilities-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Shoshanah Dean
Hilmer
Sent: Tuesday, October 28, 2008 10:44 AM
To: The Learning Disabilities Discussion List
Subject: [LearningDisabilities 2499] Question



I want to pose a question to the literacy professionals on the list that
needs some background information first. In the past, when a student came
into our center needing decoding skills, and their comprehension skills were
good, I'd place them in a basic word study class using, for example, the
Wilson Reading System. Even if a student's reading ability was at an upper
intermediate level, I'd start her on 1.3 in Wilson or at the beginning (if
her comprehension was excellent and her main issue was picking apart unknown
words/spelling). This has worked very well for my program. Students have
been happy with their placement. However, now we find ourselves in a
position where we need to show quick gains on the TABE. We need a 2 grade
level jump ASAP to get some funding. What is your advice for materials to
use for students who read between 2nd grade and a 5th grade level? Would
you still start them at Wilson 1.3 or at the beginning? My problem is
adults have what I call "swiss cheese gaps". They have some skills and not
other foundational knowledge. Every student's prior knowledge is different.
I feel like I "spin my wheels" just trying to find out where the gaps are.
However, I don't have time to waste starting everyone from basically the
beginning if that's not the best plan.

Thank you,
Shannie






----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--

Want to read Hotmail messages in Outlook? The Wordsmiths show you how.
Learn Now
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/learningdisabilities/attachments/20081029/566f86aa/attachment.html


More information about the LearningDisabilities discussion list