Dyslexia Programs We Have Tried

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • In this video I share the path I went down over the last decade as I tried to help my children with dyslexia on a low income. Almost every approach or program we used is here- along with what I would do if I could do it over.
    ~LIKE, COMMENT, SHARE, SUBSCRIBE, GET NOTIFICATIONS ~ LET'S GET TO 4,000 PUBLIC WATCH HOURS!~
    TIME STAMPS
    Reviews of each Program, Book, or Method
    0:21 “Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons” review (not designed for dyslexia)
    0:42 Dyslexia Improvement Videos
    0:54 Alternative Solutions- (Primitive Reflex Therapies) Learning Success, Brain Balance, Changed Diet
    1:09 Orton-Gillingham and Structured Literacy explanation
    1:46 Pointing above the word as child points below- a great reading method
    1:55 “Teaching Your Children to Read Using the Book of Mormon” review
    2:49 “Blast Off to Reading” review
    3:07 “Toe by Toe” review
    3:30 “Stairway to Spelling” review
    3:50 “Learn Reading” program review
    4:23 “Reading Horizons” program review
    4:50 “Barton Reading and Spelling System” program review
    5:30 “All About Spelling”
    6:21 “All About Reading” (AAR) program review
    7:19 “Barton” review continued
    8:00 “Foundation in Sounds” review
    9:00 about phonemic awareness & “Equipped for Reading Success”
    9:38 MY ADVICE IF I COULD DO IT OVER- WHAT I WISH I’D KNOWN
    9:49 Letter Factory 5-7 days a week during 2-3 years old
    10:13 and nursery rhymes and songs
    10:25 and flash cards and learning toys
    10:45 Foundation in Sounds & Equipped for Reading Success at 4 years old
    11:05 Start tutoring your child 20 minutes a day in an OG program like Barton or All About Reading
    11:58 read to and with them from birth for 10-20 minutes a day.
    RELATED VIDEOS, RESOURCES, AND LINKS MENTIONED
    Review video on Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons • Review: How to Teach Y...
    Dyslexia Improvements Videos • Review: How to Teach Y...
    What is Orton Gillingham • What is Orton-Gillingh...
    Teaching Your Children to Read Using the Book of Mormon by Grant Von Harrison is out of print
    Adult and child Finger Tracking method for reading • Adult Finger Tracking ...
    Blast off to Reading Workbook www.amazon.com/gp/product/098...
    Toe by Toe www.amazon.com/gp/product/095...
    Stairway to Spelling www.amazon.com/Stareway-Spell...
    Learn Reading www.learnreading.com/
    Reading Horizons www.readinghorizons.com/
    Barton Reading and Spelling System bartonreading.com/
    My “awesome parenting techniques” • HOW TO MAKE COVID-19 S...
    • Homework Motivation: H...
    All About Reading & Spelling www.allaboutlearningpress.com/
    Foundation in Sounds www.foundationinsounds.com/
    Barton student screening - auditory processing screening. bartonreading.com/students/#ss
    Equipped with Reading Success equippedforreadingsuccess.com/
    Video with Trevor Clark • Trevor Clark - What We...
    Book Series Dyslexic Kids Love
    • Book Series Dyslexic K...
    Encouraging Dyslexic Kids to Read
    • Encouraging Dyslexic C...
    LETTER FACTORY • Playlist
    DYSLEXIA & UPLIFTING T-SHIRTS DESIGNED BY AMY & FAMILY
    www.amazon.com/s?rh=n%3A71411...
    YOU MIGHT ALSO LIKE THESE VIDEOS:
    Early Symptoms of Dyslexia: Ages 0-5
    • Early Symptoms of Dysl...
    Homeschool for Dyslexic Children: Advantages and Disadvantages
    • Homeschool for Dyslexi...
    What is Dyslexia?
    • What is Dyslexia? ︳New...
    LET'S CONNECT:
    ▹ Instagram / amyondyslexia
    ▹Twitter / amynoel_youtube
    ▹Facebook / amy.doziernoel
    I also have a blog dedicated to healthy relationships, lasting happiness, and peace. www.askamyblog.com
    MY SON’S RUclips CHANNEL:
    NOEL BROS
    / @noelbros4766
    __________
    #Dyslexia #Remediation #OGPrograms #WhatToDoForDyslexia

Комментарии • 44

  • @aebader
    @aebader 2 года назад +2

    Thank you so much for sharing your experience and feedback of all these different programs. This is so helpful!!

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  2 года назад

      I am so glad it was helpful! Thank you for the comment.

  • @keaherron1827
    @keaherron1827 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for this excellent review, Amy!

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  2 года назад

      Thank you for saying so. I try to make helpful videos.

  • @NoThanku00
    @NoThanku00 11 месяцев назад +3

    If your child has a more than mild form of dyslexia i would NOT use All About Reading. I have used this and it is a great curriculum, but in my opinion it is not enough support for a child with dyslexia. I would recommend Barton or the Wilson Reading System (wilson is done with a certified tutor in this program).

  • @jenniferbyrne4567
    @jenniferbyrne4567 8 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you! This is the best video!!

  • @kimberlyu1308
    @kimberlyu1308 2 года назад +1

    Great video! Your channel needs more views.

  • @xiomanaxoxoxo3212
    @xiomanaxoxoxo3212 4 месяца назад +1

    Very informative thank you!

  • @dotcosmo9238
    @dotcosmo9238 2 месяца назад

    Have you heard of Tattum Reading? As a teacher who has brought students to grade level or above (including non-reader 5th graders with dyslexia) I highly, highly recommend Tattum Reading.

  • @chanellergful
    @chanellergful 2 года назад +2

    My daughter was in public school through 3rd. She was diagnosed ASD and dyslexic as well as other learning deficits in reading and math. While in school she completed the entire Scottish Rite take Flight dyslexia program with a professional with little to no progress. We had a private tutor for a long time with no progress, did 100 easy lessons and gave up, we did AAR 1 and 2, we did AAS 1, we did the right brain reading curriculum, we have done teach type read and spell, we have done sequential spelling, we have re-done AAR 1, and she is now in 8th grade and still cannot read or spell a whole sentence without getting confused and struggling. Her comprehension is great and she uses assistive tech to talk to text. We haven't tried Barton. Is it that different than AAR to justify the price? I'm at a loss on how to help her at this point.

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  2 года назад

      Sorry that I didn't see this sooner! My son with ASD hasn't had much success from tutoring programs either. My kids that aren't autistic have gotten to grade level according to their recent tests at school. I think, you could try Barton. It is way more detailed than any other program I have seen- almost to the point of being tedious. But, she may like the predictability of the lessons. You could always try it out and if it doesn't work you can sell it on eBay. I think it's worth a try. You can get a used set on eBay for cheaper. The lower levels are usually available. At the website you will find a screener to see if she has auditory processing issues which would need to be addressed first with "Foundations in Sounds" or "LiPS". Let me know if this helps or you have any other questions. For my 14 year old with ASD and Dyslexia I am debating about continuing tutoring. It seems fruitless and he is not enjoying it, but I still think we should keep trying. Something is better than nothing.

  • @rae4407
    @rae4407 2 года назад +4

    Barton for the win! Try Learning Ally for the boys.

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  2 года назад

      Yay Barton! We got a free subscription for Learning Ally for two of my boys, but they didn't take to it well. I think they were used to the professional audio quality on Audible, Epic, and Myon. I might try introducing it to them again.

  • @LoriMarie2322
    @LoriMarie2322 Год назад +1

    This is so informative! Thank you… question, we are currently completely level 1 of all about reading. I would like to transition over to Barton but if possible I’d like to skip to level 2. Do you have any insights? Thank you!!

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  Год назад

      Sorry I didn’t respond sooner! You probably already found an answer, but I believe Barton has pre tests for each level.

    • @teamgibber
      @teamgibber Год назад

      I personally wouldn't skip any levels. My child is level 5. If they don't need the level, they will fly through it and gain some confidence.

  • @reenyjones1869
    @reenyjones1869 Год назад

    Very interesting. Spalding was recommended to me by 2 different reading teachers. It teaches spelling and that is supposed to help dyslexics read. I bought the old 96 version before it was rewritten for common core. Have you looked at it?

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  Год назад

      Sorry for the late reply! I haven't seen that method myself, but I just looked it up. The website says it is multi-sensory, sequential, and explicit. Those are the elements a good program needs. Has it been helping?

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  Год назад

      Barton Reading and Spelling program also teaches spelling and has very good results for most people that use it. Spelling, encoding, is a step up from reading, decoding. It requires all the skills needed for decoding- breaking down the parts of words, phoneme awareness, etc. So, if you study spelling with reading I think it is good. I have a video about spelling tests for dyslexics. It is a good skill but needs to be done in tandem with a reading program so that the words go along with the orthographic mapping the student has acquired.

  • @teamgibber
    @teamgibber Год назад +2

    I'm curious at what level your kids are in Barton and what age? We are in level 5 and the phrases and sentences are just way too grown up for my 11 year old daughter. But she's still not reading at grade level and doesn't have basic phonogram skills. I prefer to have reading and spelling in one program, but now I really see the wisdom in splitting them up like AAR. She could learn the phonograms faster then the Barton scope and sequence.

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  Год назад

      My kids that were doing Burton have quit because it was really intense to have tutoring three days a week for three kids. I’m still doing all about reading with Daniel, my youngest. he is on the last level. He has spelling tests for school now and we practice those every morning before we do all about reading. I don’t think I’ll do all about spelling. My older kids were tired of tutoring and, to be honest, so was I.

    • @queeniebee237
      @queeniebee237 10 месяцев назад +1

      @teamgibber
      Wow! Thank you for sharing that. I was second guessing myself even though AAR is working for us and getting stressed that I need to push in the spelling more even though it exhausts him so. He is much better when only one thing is being focused on and spelling work is only a few times a month. Hopefully as he get older and better we can work on that more.

  • @kendramackenzie192
    @kendramackenzie192 2 года назад +1

    I am trying toe by toe and equipped for reading success

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  2 года назад +1

      That is great. Trevor Clark said he used those too.

  • @Dragonsrocksalways
    @Dragonsrocksalways Год назад +1

    Where did you get the book Teaching your children to read using the book of mormon? I'm very interested. My kiddo is autistic and trying to find ways to help her read.

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  Год назад +1

      I ordered a used copy online. I think it is out of print, but I found one. I sold mine online when I was done with it. It was about $50 if I remember correctly.

  • @Heidi123
    @Heidi123 11 месяцев назад +1

    What about for older kids (9yeat-old) who can read (slowly) but poor at writing and spelling.

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  8 месяцев назад

      I would say to use the Barton Reading and Spelling system or Wilson. They are great for spelling.

  • @ReiverGrad14
    @ReiverGrad14 2 года назад +2

    I don't understand why if it's dyslexic specific then it's outrageously priced. I can not afford AAR and Barton is hugely overpriced.

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  2 года назад +1

      I totally agree. It kept me from getting my kids the help they need early on (except my youngest). But I wish I had even started a couple years earlier with him. This video is a young man sharing how he remediated using mainly Equipped For Reading Success by David Kilpatrick. It is $55 www.amazon.com/gp/product/0964690365/ref=dbs_a_def_rwt_bibl_vppi_i2. The video is a bit long but I put a lot of timestamps in it.

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  2 года назад

      But, I also think the amount of time and planning they put into developing the programs makes it that price. All About Reading is affordable as far as reading curriculums go. Schools pay huge amounts of money for textbooks and curriculums. How old is your child? I kept trying to save money early on but later realized that it would've been worth it to sacrifice the $100 for the curriculum from the get-go. I was able to spend $100 on Christmas presents or emergencies. It just didn't seem like a justifiable expense early on. But, I wish I had sacrificed for it. It is so much easier to remediate children when they are young because of their brain development and because they are more willing to spend time on it in elementary school than in middle school and high school. It is like pulling teeth to get my kids to work with their tutors. (The school is paying for tutors for them, but I provided the curriculum).

    • @ReiverGrad14
      @ReiverGrad14 2 года назад

      @@AmyNoelonDyslexia I have a 4th grader and I have homeschooled him for 3 years. I am still being told by the school that he will outgrow it even though he's showed signs of dyslexia since he was 3 and there's a family history. I can't get tutoring for him because I have to go through the public school. As a single parent I can't afford $150 a level which is the cost of AAR. It's not affordable when most language arts curriculums are $50.

    • @shawnmurphy7778
      @shawnmurphy7778 2 года назад +1

      @@AmyNoelonDyslexia Amy, I agree with you 100%. Also, there are Facebook groups out there which sell used Barton sets, and you can often get them for a lot less money. They are still very expensive, but waiting to buy the program is just wasting precious time. As your child gets older, he will be less and less likely to want to work on reading and spelling due to the societal expectations that they should have mastered these skills years ago. It takes a significant time investment to do Barton, and you will want to start early. It can take 6 months to a year to complete a single level, and there are 10 levels. I would recommend doing All About Spelling along with Barton because All About Spelling has a unique way of teaching the spelling rules. Barton teaches the spelling rules, but in more of a lecture format; whereas All About Spelling teaches the spelling rules in a way in which the student must write the particular rule. I think that these two programs complement each other.

    • @shawnmurphy7778
      @shawnmurphy7778 2 года назад +2

      @@ReiverGrad14 He will NOT outgrow it. Those $50 programs will just be a waste of money. Save up for Barton & All About Spelling.

  • @karengatlin9835
    @karengatlin9835 2 месяца назад

    You lost me at The Book of Mormon. 🙅‍♀️

    • @AmyNoelonDyslexia
      @AmyNoelonDyslexia  2 месяца назад

      It was a structured reading program based around the Book of Mormon because that’s important to our faith. Sorry you can’t respect that part of our path.