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Notes from: Braille Literacy-A Functional Approach --by Diane P. Wormsley Good book to read: Teacher, by Sylvia Ashton Warner, 1963 For the student who is generally unable to learn to read through traditional methods & may never achieve basic or academic literacy skills. Individualized – uses what's meaningful to the learner At home/school: o add on and off on light switches o add hot and cold on water taps Tell them what you label that isn't usually labeled elsewhere. Organizational skills o extremely important o organize shelves so they can get own materials o label shelves in print & Braille to id materials o label equipment used, utensils, cutlery, dishes, place mats – whatever used to set table or put things away o keep in consistent places = more independence learn that they have a place in the environment Collect vocab words o from student o which words are frequently used w/student o Names of significant people, like- teacher, aide, other students, cafeteria people, office people, therapists-that the student calls them. o Words from daily routine – cafeteria, bus, gym, music o Favorite foods – tomato soup, macaroni & cheese, coke, choc milk o brailler, tape recorder, paper, locker, desk, chair o hobbies, favorite things & activities o words or phrases used at home o what they do/where they go on the weekend o favorite song, TV show, game toy, doll names o Consistent teacher's greeting, like, "Yo, bud." 1 Make a lead in line of dots 25, space, word, space, line of dots 25 away from word o keeps fingers moving L->R o centers the fingertips o provides frame of reference Use o 3x5 cards or larger o blank flash cards from APH – already have a cut corner o talk cards Make extras of each word put them in box after student identifies & recognizes them o put them upside down with the Braille facing the back nonslip material under the cards all other fingers need to be next to each other like 'scouts' to see how long the word is and not to slip off that line point out how the word feels & its uniqueness point out where dots are at the beginning over learn before learning the next one start off with student' name and "Mr. Nobody" which is 5 full cells questions to ask the student about each word o longer? o shorter? o what are the dots at the beginning? o what are dots at the end? o how does it feel to you? Put flashcards into 2 piles or 2 containers o got / didn't get o RIGHT / LEFT-over A magnetic card reader will give more independence Sort 5 of each word cards into piles DAILY match cards on teacher made board with library card pockets or Velcro keep track of how many student can recognize in one minute use the vocab words to introduce tracking exercises after 2 words are learned, and begin to teach some of the letters in those words 2 incorporate Mangold, but don't need to use all of it Take finger breaks every 5 minutes; massage fingers and hands with hand cream; switch to another activity for a few minutes to demonstrate to student whether or not the fingers are lined up: o pencil or straight edge o guided reading technique – teacher's left thumb & fingers create a frame that rests above and to the left of the student's; thumb gently push student's fingers as they track along. have each had read separately from time to time keep introducing new vocab words through the sight word card method, then integrating them into tracking exercises to introduce id of letters: o select the most distinct first letter of the words o intro this letter just like the sight word cards o use that letter to track a line, with the word somewhere in the line o provide other words that begin with the same letter o can make cards of those words Sorting games: o Find every card that has the word ____ on it. o Find every card that has only the letter ____ on it. o Find every card that has the word ___ on it or that has the word ____ on it, if that is the other word beginning with the letter ____. o Find all the words beginning with the letter _____, then sort them by the words that begin with that letter. Games for letter discrimination: o tracking sheet with complete lines repeating only one letter with spaces in between o develop a tracking activity sheet with same letter repeating 5 or 6 times in a row, varying it on each row, then switching to another letter that has been learned. 3 Phonemic awareness skill areas: o grouping words with similar and dissimilar sounds: rat, rug, sun o blending and splitting syllables into onset and rime (the beginning consonant and the ending sound): b-eet o blending sounds into words: /s/-/u/-/n/ o segmenting a word as a sequence of distinct sounds, or phonemes: ship is made from 3 phonemes, /sh/, /i/, /p/ o detecting and manipulating sounds with words: changing r in run to s to make sun Phonics – the relationship between sounds and the symbols that represent them. Phonemic awareness and phonics go hand in hand, for ex: changing the medial vowel from pad – ped – pid – pod – pud How to incorporate meaningful vocab with phonics: o Use the beginning consonants from the vocab words to create books of words beginning with the same one. For ex: bad, book, balloon, backpack, banana, bee, bow… Make these books with a child rather than for him. o Present other words that follow the same pattern as the vocab word. For ex: bad, dad, mad, sad, pad, glad… o Look for consonant blends in the words. For ex: Brittany, bring, bread, brown… o Look for vowel patterns. For ex: beat, heat, neat, seat, treat, meat, eat… o Look for any other patterns that can lead to other words with the same pattern. Student should also, at the same time, be developing writing skills. Create functional uses for reading and writing: o schedule of activities o label items in the environment (student can Braille them), items of clothing as to their color, microwave settings, spices, tools they use, CDs… o simple recipes for snacks or quick meals o grocery lists 4 create stories o use repetition o keep stories bound or in a notebook which the student can decorate o reading and rereading familiar stories promotes fluency, efficient tracking, eliminates scrubbing, automatic word recognition, reading comprehension keep track of: o letters that student can identify and write o contractions o phonics patterns mastered More ideas of how to use the functional approach: o with a talking card reader o songs o Dolch word list, and then use them together to write sentences Ready to move on to more formal reading materials when he has learned most of the letters, has a good grasp of phonics, and has word boxes full of words he can read. practice reading stories is more fun and motivating that practicing reading lists of words A cardboard box that is perfectly level with the area where the paper is inserted can be used to help in loading a paper into a Brailler. 5