Tools & Strategies for Teaching Your Students Short Vowels from Orton Gillingham Coaching

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • In this video I go through Orton Gillingham approach for Short Vowels. I cover the Short Vowel Reading Deck as well as tools and teaching strategies.
    Links:
    Scope & Sequence Workbooks (these workbooks contain the mini-cards from the video): bit.ly/2YN0XDP
    Link to Magnet Sheets (if you want to make magnet cards/strips): amzn.to/3lMPD2y
    Link to White Board in video: amzn.to/3zxk1CL
    Link to Paper to make Cards: amzn.to/3EKC3We
    Drill Card Book: bit.ly/3V0VoKY
    Teachers Pay Teachers Shop: bit.ly/4acxF1e
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    FTC: Some links included in this description might be affiliate links. If you purchase a product through one of them, I will receive a commission (at no additional cost to you). I truly appreciate your support of my channel. Thank you for watching! Video is not sponsored.

Комментарии • 23

  • @muddy1084
    @muddy1084 Год назад

    Sorry not disrespect intended. Outstanding presentation your efforts are appreciated.

    • @ortongillinghamcoaching
      @ortongillinghamcoaching  Год назад +1

      No offense taken at all. Your comment made me laugh because no one has ever said a "hint" of an accent. I appreciate you watching my videos!

  • @butyoucancallmesam
    @butyoucancallmesam Год назад +1

    I'm so glad to have found someone who sounds like me - Southern accent! This helps me to teach my homeschooled daughter.
    My name is Sam, but when my daughter isolates the short vowel sound, she hears e. If I'm honest, I do too. Any tips with that?

    • @ortongillinghamcoaching
      @ortongillinghamcoaching  11 месяцев назад +1

      Sorry this is such a late reply! Both southern and northern accents have their issues with certain letters. This is an article about dialect: ogforall.com/how-a-dialect-can-mix-things-up/
      I think the key is in dictation to be sure to say the letter as it really sounds, even when you have a schwa word, for sounding purposes, you would pronounce the letter as it should be.

  • @JL7ify
    @JL7ify 2 года назад

    Thank you soooo much for teaching me to be the best teacher I can become!

    • @ortongillinghamcoaching
      @ortongillinghamcoaching  2 года назад +1

      Thank you for your kind comment! You made me smile :-)

    • @JL7ify
      @JL7ify 2 года назад

      @@ortongillinghamcoaching ❤

  • @tinamaynor7350
    @tinamaynor7350 7 месяцев назад

    Thanks

  • @nourashine8916
    @nourashine8916 2 года назад

    Thank you

  • @askchristyle741
    @askchristyle741 2 года назад

    Very helpful thank you!

  • @muddy1084
    @muddy1084 Год назад +1

    Jennifer you gorgeous young lady with a hint of southern accent I’m in love.

  • @doratuininga4121
    @doratuininga4121 2 года назад +7

    egg ,would be better

    • @ortongillinghamcoaching
      @ortongillinghamcoaching  2 года назад +1

      I went with the training I received, but certainly "egg" would be a great key word.

    • @pearlgirl
      @pearlgirl 2 года назад +2

      The word “egg” is a tricky word too- just listen. It makes a long “A” sound like in the word “eight”. I am an OG tutor too. The short “e” sound is harder to isolate easily. It usually tangles with l or n, as in the word “enter”, “end”, “elephant”, “elf”, or “elbow”. What word would you use?

    • @pearlgirl
      @pearlgirl 2 года назад +1

      ‘egg’ has the long a sound like in ‘eight’.
      The word politically ‘Eskimo’ is not good to use. What word should I use? elbow, elephant, end, and enter are some initial short E Vowel sound.

    • @ortongillinghamcoaching
      @ortongillinghamcoaching  2 года назад +2

      @@pearlgirl Hi Laura, I have one resource who uses "Ed" and four more that use "Eddy" (including the Orton Gillingham Manual). I didn't think of Eskimo being politically incorrect -- it's just what I was taught in the course I took (those cards I still use are from that course, so I stuck with it). I hope it will be forgiven that I used it. I assume they used it because it had a picture that could go with it and the "e" sound is kind of isolated, so easier to hear? I think I just said "egg" off the top of my head in the video. My southern dialect makes it a solid "e" when I say it, but I can see others making it long a sound. I think I would do something like "elk" or "web" (and just let the sound be in the middle). I think "end" and "enter" in a southern dialect sounds too much like "i" and elephant has that schwa e in it. What do you think of "elk" or "web"? And those could still have a picture with them.

    • @pearlgirl
      @pearlgirl 2 года назад +6

      Thank you! Web, elk, Ed and Eddy, I’ll select one. Thank you!
      I’m currently live more north, in Canada, and here the word ‘Eskimo’ is seriously offensive to the native people who live north of the North Pole. It literally means ‘people with no eyebrows’ and has been labeled ‘outdated’ and incorrect, ‘Inuit’ is what is used now instead to describe or call this northern people. I remember being corrected 30 years ago in University and the public school system. So for those of us in contact with northern society it is not a correct folklore word to use.