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Title: Dyslexia Friendly Classrooms Network


1
Dyslexia Friendly Classrooms Network
Claire Ridsdale, Teaching and Learning Adviser
(Literacy) Jackie Muggleton, Inclusion
Support Coordinator
2
Aims
  • To share successes and findings from cohorts 1
    2
  • To discuss teaching and learning strategies that
    support
  • the development of a dyslexia friendly ethos
  • To identify strategies and developments that
    would
  • support school priorities from the school
    improvement
  • plan

3
Gap Task
  • Before session 2
  • Identify a focus group in each class
  • Complete questionnaires with the focus group
  • Collect benchmark level info. for the focus
    group
  • Read through school improvement plan

4
Strategies Teaching Approaches
5
A Dyslexia-Friendly Classroom Resources
6
Resources Seat Wedges
7
Resources Transparencies
8
Resources Writing Implements
9
Resources Writing Implements
10
Resources Raised Writing Surface
11
Resources Reading Rulers
12
A Dyslexia-Friendly Classroom Organisation
13
A Dyslexia-Friendly Classroom Organisation
  • No distractions
  • Visual timetables
  • Seating plans
  • Memory joggers
  • Colour coding
  • Good light
  • Eye contact
  • AfL
  • Develops self-esteem

14
Visual Timetables
Widgit Clicker 5
15
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16
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17
Teaching Approaches
You have 1 minute! Share with a partner
strategies you have found successful when
teaching dyslexic pupils. Write on post it
notes
18
Teaching Approaches/Strategies
  • Oral work to stimulate ideas, as planning, to
  • sequence
  • Does it need to be written down?
  • Posters/vocabulary displayed
  • Mind maps
  • Visual and kinaesthetic approaches
  • Paired work
  • Joined handwriting memory of the hand

19
Teaching Approaches/Strategies
  • Give copies as well as looking at the board
  • Present information in a range of ways, (eg.
    pictures,
  • flow charts, diagrams, charts, drama, cards)
  • Display prompts and reminders
  • Use ICT (digital cameras, voice recorders,
    software)
  • Easy access to resources, clearly labelled
  • Use colour (distinguishing ideas, paper, sticky
    notes)
  • Choice of homework activities - VAK

20
Teaching Approaches/Strategies
  • Pupil involvement in target setting
  • Good communication with parents
  • Not rocket science! Important thing is that use
    of these strategies is consistent throughout the
    school and that children are regularly reminded
    about them

21
In Detail
22
Building Self-Esteem
Learning is an emotionally high risk activity and
failure is often extremely painful.
Kyriacou, C. (1991) Essential teaching skills
23
Building Self-Esteem
  • Use specific praise
  • Praise ideas, content and effort
  • Value the childs work and make sure that the
    child
  • and their peers do too
  • Notice and use the childs strengths
  • Avoid exposing childrens weaknesses in front of
    peers
  • Make sure everyone in the class understands what
  • dyslexia is, and knows about some of the
    talented
  • or famous people who were/are dyslexic

24
Building Self-Esteem
The Language of Success Signal confidence in
their ability to succeed I know you can The
Language of Hope Create an ethos where its ok to
try and ask for help You can do it What
helps you do it? The Language of
Possibility Reduce limiting statements such as,
I always get it wrong. Yes, you were a bit
confused but lets see which bit is causing you
problems
25
Self-Esteem
26
VAK
27
VAK - Visual
  • Visual, auditory and kinaesthetic are NOT
    learning styles, they are ways we take in
    information.
  • The way we process information is our learning
    style. (Activist, reflector, theorist,
    pragmatist).

28
VAK - Visual
  • Ensure that all classrooms support visual
    learning
  • Display subject specific vocabulary and
    resources
  • routinely
  • Use colour - to separate information, record
    organise
  • ideas
  • Use diagrams/flow charts etc. to represent
    ideas
  • Use images to support work in class (Google
    image)
  • Allow children to record their ideas visually

29
Examples
30
How Does Mind Mapping Help?
  • The brain works best when both hemispheres
    function in harmony
  • Mind mapping combines the words, order of things
    and details with images and colour BIG PICTURE
  • Many children can only learn well when they know
    the whole context
  • Mind maps keep you focussed on the main idea and
    all the additional ideas
  • Radiant notes can be turned into linear writing

31
How Visual is Your Classroom?
  • Quiz

32
VAK - Auditory
Use a range of speaking listening strategies
Use children as teachers to embed understanding
memory
Sing information to rhythm, as a whole-class
group
Record sound using PCs/mp3s. Attach the
recordings to files so that pupils can hear
instructions or information
33
Speaking Listening
34
VAK - Kinaesthetic
  • Invent actions to correspond with the learning
    (e.g.
  • tables aerobics!)
  • Teach joined handwriting from the start
  • Use role play, freeze framing and drama
    techniques
  • Address the same learning objective in
    practical ways
  • Use whole body movements writing in the air,
  • jumping along number lines on the floor

35
VAK in Practice
Youre teaching how rivers transport and deposit
materials. (QCA geography unit 14) How could
this be taught using visual, auditory
kinaesthetic approaches?
36
Coffee
37
Memory Strategies
38
Memory Difficulties Dyslexic Children May
  • Not retain a series of instructions
  • Remember something one day forget it the next
  • Not retain spellings, tables, lists
  • Have poor short term memory
  • Struggle with rote learning

39
Memory Strategies From last time!
  • What is the national rail symbol?
  • Look at mespell your name
  • Now spell
  • Now spell
  • What strategies do we use?
  • How can these be used in the classroom?

40
MOSS
Muliti-sensory, Over-learning using a Structured,
Sequential approach
  • Muliti-sensory
  • Use a range of V, A, K approaches together
  • Over-learning
  • Constant repetition to revise, re-visit and apply
    skills until
  • they become automatic. Pre-tutoring
  • Structured
  • Chunking the learning easier for short term
    memory
  • Children see progress
  • Sequential
  • Learning in an order that makes sense and builds
  • on skills

41
MOSS
42
I.C.T.
Penfriend XP
43
I.C.T.
44
NEW! Write Online
  • Subscription pupils have passwords and can
    access this
  • scaffolded word processor anywhere as long as
    they are
  • on line.

45
Presenting Written Information
46
Presenting Written Information
47
Presenting Written Information
  • Use off-white coloured paper
  • Use a minimum of 14pt text
  • Use rounded fonts such as Arial, Tahoma
  • Keep lines left justified with a ragged right
    edge
  • Use line spacing to break up text
  • Use wide margins and headings. Highlight
    margins.
  • Use bold to highlight (not italics or
    underlining)
  • Use bullet points instead of numbered lists
  • Write clear, concise sentences and
    instructions
  • Use flow charts to represent information
    visually

48
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49
Guided Work
50
Guided Work
  • Why Guided Work? It
  • Engages pupils
  • Supports at the point of need
  • Provides a structured strategy that pupils can
    then
  • apply independently
  • Promotes communication, experimentation and
    risk
  • taking in a trusted small group setting
  • Enables explicit modelling of key skills
  • Provides assessment and target setting
    opportunities

51
Guided Work
  • Supporting Success in Reading and Writing
    documents
  • Identify where children are and next steps
  • Skills based not content based
  • Regular assessment to inform teaching and
    learning

52
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53
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54
Letters and Sounds
55
Access Strategies
56
Access Strategies
  • Use of TAs
  • Pre-tutoring
  • Buddies
  • Talk opportunities explicit in planning
  • Individual resource bags
  • VAK homework multiple choice

57
Cohorts 1 and 2
58
Key Successes
  • Individual learning packs
  • Resource boxes
  • Memory cards, visual prompts
  • Acetates
  • Reading rulers
  • Seat wedges
  • Alternative forms of recording
  • Greater use of kinaesthetic approaches in
    planning
  • Learning styles smarts website
  • Teaching about roles in a group different
  • strengths

59
Key Successes
  • Homework options, starting in school
  • Talk partners
  • Compliment corners
  • 2type
  • Joined writing
  • Consistent and systematic phonic teaching
  • Involving parents
  • Questionnaires/surveys

60
Key Successes
  • Improvement in reading and writing, (although
    this was less
  • evident than the SE impact needs more
    time)
  • Consistency for the children
  • ALL children benefited
  • Supported work with parents/queries form
  • parents

61
Impact
  • Happier children
  • More comfortable in school
  • Better quality homework, more of it, more
  • enthusiastic and handed in on time!
  • Greater motivation and engagement during
  • afternoon sessions due to practical activities
  • More on task for a significant proportion of
    the time
  • Social emotional development much improved
  • self-esteem

62
Key Recommendations
Get the whole staff on board you need
commitment from everyone to make it work
Share your purpose and direction
Share with parents from the start
63
Key Recommendations
Think about how TAs can best be used
Provide 11 clarification/reassurance where its
needed
Offer as wide a range of clubs as possible
64
Key Recommendations
  • Review progress as a whole staff throughout the
    year the impetus can be lost otherwise

Be open to new ideas and trying them out
Keep at it!
65
School Priorities
66
Development Planning
  • Look through your schools development plan
  • What are the key priorities?
  • What elements of the Dyslexia Friendly Classroom
  • network could be implemented to support these?
  • What could be trialled throughout the whole
    school?
  • What additional approaches could be developed in
    the
  • focus classes?

67
Gap Task
  • Before session 3
  • Deliver whole school training (staff
    meeting/INSET)
  • Identify approaches to be trialled throughout
    the whole
  • school
  • Agree additional strategies to be developed in
    focus
  • classes
  • Next time 29th January 2009, 9.00-12.00, Rodford
    Primary
  • Bring the form indicating the strategies youre
  • going to develop
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