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Teaching Dyslexic students in the English Language Classroom

Teaching Dyslexic students in the English Language Classroom. Donatella Fitzgerald Oxford University Press. Quiz . Work in pairs to answer the questions ! Prizes !!!. Answers. 1. a) Greek : dys ( meaning poor or inadequate ) lexis ( meaning words or language )

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Teaching Dyslexic students in the English Language Classroom

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  1. TeachingDyslexicstudents in the English LanguageClassroom Donatella Fitzgerald Oxford University Press

  2. Quiz • Work in pairstoanswer the questions! • Prizes!!!

  3. Answers • 1. a) Greek : • dys(meaningpoor or inadequate) • lexis(meaningwords or language) • b) a slightdisorderof the brainthatcausesdifficulty in reading and spelling, forexamplebutdoesnotaffect intelligence. (Oxford AdvancedLearner’s Dictionary 8° edition)

  4. Famous people withdyslexia

  5. 1 – c • 2 – a • 3 – b • 4. BritishDyslexicAssociation: ‘Thereis no magicage’.

  6. 5: all are indicators • 6: 5% ofschoolagechildren in Italy (approx 350,000 students) • 7 b) lower case • 8 c) mind maps d) Listen and Read

  7. Today`s workshop • The effects of Dylexia • Associated issues • Dyslexia at school • Howteachers can help dyslexicstudents at school: • Whichactivities help dyslexicstudentslearn: Practicalideas • Supportfrom Oxford University Press

  8. The effectsofDyslexia • Coredifficulty: word recognition, reading, fluency, spelling and writing • Problems in classroom, workplace • Affect a person’s self image • Demotivate students

  9. A teacher sent the following note home with a six-year-old boy: "He is too stupid to learn." That boy was Thomas A. Edison.

  10. dysorthography dysgraphia

  11. Recognizing dyslexic students Studentshavedifficulties in: • Learningwords/letters/sounds • Spelling football/futbol , mirroredletters or reversed (p-b-d-g-w-n-m) • Reading/word recognition, misreads e.g. “look” and “lock”, “house” and “horse”. • Pronunciation • Learningsequencesofwords/letters

  12. The brain • Left hemisphere • More analytical • Right hemisphere • Visual • creative

  13. Dyslexia at school Strengthscentred at the centreof the brain.

  14. What areas of learning do dyslexic students need help with? • 1. Reading • 2.

  15. Dyslexicstudentsneedstrategiesto help with: • Reading • Writing • Spelling • Dealingwithsymbols • Letters • Numbers • Musical notation • Learningphonics • Followinginstructions • Listeningcarefully • Respondingaccurately and puttingthings in order

  16. How can teachers help dyslexicstudents at school? • Adequate help and encouragement in developing learning strategies • Give exact and short instructions. • Adopt a multisensory approach to teaching • Apply an individual approach. • Don’t teach similar things one after the other • Let student learn by doing.

  17. “if the dyslexic child does not learn the way you teach, can you teach him the way he learns?” • H.T Chasty – consultant in learning abilities and difficulties

  18. A studentwithdyslexia • can be a positive, contributing, and valued class member • is an intelligent person who does not learn in the same way as others • learnsbydoing

  19. Students with dyslexia have difficulty in English in the following areas: • Reading • Learning new vocabulary • Grammar • Writing • Speaking • Confidence

  20. Reading and secondary school • Speed of reading • Scanning • Dictionaries • Reading for gist • Reading for details • Confuse similar words sun\son

  21. A windowMarker

  22. Reading • Dyslexiafriendly text • Thickpaper • Matt/notglossy • Cream/soft pastel (blue or pink) • Plain font eg. Arialor comicsans • Font size 12-14 point • Avoid green/red/pinkdifficultforcolourblindedstudents

  23. Grammar • Grammar tables • Colour coding (always use the same colours).

  24. A morphologicalchain

  25. The alphabet • Difficulty in learning sequences • Draw letters on your back • Plastic letters • Putting words in alphabetical order • Alphabet ruler: for using dictionaries

  26. An alphabetruler

  27. Vocabulary • Poor memory • Revision techniques • Memo: vocabulary notebook • Learn words as a morphological chain • Road signs (lower case) • Word cards

  28. The shapeof the word

  29. Vocabulary in a box

  30. Writing • Problems planning work • Spelling • Go through their plan orally • Key words • Mind maps

  31. Speaking • Whole class activities:drills and choral repetition • Do not pick on a dyslexic student individually

  32. Confidence • Introduce strategies into everyday class activities. • Digitalbooks can help

  33. Apply a multi-sensory approach • Look, listen say • Listen and sing • Look, point and say • Listen and colour • Listen and do • Play the game

  34. Oxford Test Makers • Change font oftests • Use strutturati exercises • Reduce numberofexercises • Print on pale blue/pink/creampaper

  35. Homework • Difficulty in copying • Write on the boardcarefully • Write in the sameplace • Giveenoughhomeworktopractice the concept: butnottoomuch! • A homeworkdiary • A homeworkbuddy (facebook)

  36. My Digital Book supporting dyslexic language learners • Allcoursecomponentswith audio • Zoom-infunctionofallpages • Sounds chart • The alphabetwith audio • Numberswith audio • Wordlistswith audio • Colour-codedsections

  37. www.oup.com/elt/oxforditalysupport 2012

  38. A studentwithdyslexia • can be a positive, contributing, and valued class member; • is an intelligent person who does not learn in the same way as others; • learnsbydoing.

  39. If you can dream it, you can do it. - Walt Disney

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