In Part 1, I talked about my older son who had a
reading difficulty. Now, I will talk
about my younger son. He too had
difficulty learning to read. Like my
older son, Peter also went to Mommy and Me classes starting at the age of six
months. At four, I enrolled Peter in a
Montessori school which he attended for two years. Having a late birthday (October) I did not
enroll him in kindergarten until he was 5 years 11 months. I gave him the extra year because he was not
interested in the ABCs. Being a teacher,
I had tried teaching him his letters. I
tried doing it in fun ways but he was not interested. Having difficulty learning the ABCs is an
indicator that a child may have difficulty learning to read.
In first grade, Peter could read the basal reader which
was a whole language book (not
phonetic). He could read those
stories! But when it came to Hop on Pop he could not read it. He had memorized the stories in his basal
reader. Peter was never very interested
in school. In high school, he dropped
out. We took him to a private school
where it was one on one but he still was not interested. When he should have been a junior, he took
the High School Proficiency Test and passed.
Now, he could go to junior college.
He did that for a couple of years but what he really enjoyed were
computers. He had part time jobs
starting at age 16 working at different computer places. At nineteen he got a full time job at Talend
and then at 22 he got hired at Twitter.
After two years at Twitter, he is now working for Books.com and living
in the Netherlands. He very much enjoyed
both Talend and Twitter and I am sure he will enjoy working for Bookings.com.
Both boys are now avid readers, especially Peter. He’s always got his nose in a book whether
its fiction or a computer book. Steven
always has his nose in a science book. The last two trips we went on: one to
the Amazon rainforest and the Galapagos; the other to Africa, Steven brought a
big heavy chemistry book that he was constantly looking at.
It’s amazing the adults your children become. Both of my boys had difficulty in school but
now they are doing fine. I have seen the
same with their friends who also had a rough time in school. Most of them are doing well. What’s the secret? I believe it’s parents! The parents who continued to give support to
their kids through thick and thin, their kids are the ones who are now doing
well.
Our series English
Reading and Spelling for the Spanish Speaker is an excellent place to begin
for Spanish speakers who need to learn how to read and spell in English. This series uses a very systematic and
explicit approach in teaching the English speech sounds which are necessary in
learning to read.
Visit
our website at www.Fisher-Hill.com to see all of our
workbooks for Spanish-speaking teens and adults.
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