This activity is again multipurpose. (1) It connects the movement of the arms with the legs; (2) the cross-body movement of the hand touching the opposite leg (right hand touch left knee, left hand touch right knee) helps the left hemisphere of the brain connect …
Have you had the experience that when you talk to your kids, it feels like they don’t have their ears with them? Or when the teacher asks them to do something, some kids look like they didn’t hear it at all? Or they would nod …
Yet, the brain and the eyes CAN be trained! Let’s talk about this.
但是!大脑和眼睛都是可以训练的。咱们还得从头说起。
While this is relatively rare, some kids do have problems with reading at the decoding stage. First of all, what is decoding? It is basically putting the sound of the letters in a word together to read the word. Most native speaker kids from 4 to 7 (given some individual differences) can learn to read (in English) pretty easily with phonics. But, some kids do need help.
So, how to spot whether or not your child has trouble reading? First, make sure that your kids are taught phonics (or the OG method that the schools use). When kids do not have complete phonics knowledge, reading may appear to be hard, but that’s not a learning issue. For example, when they knew the sound of all the letters and learned to blend sounds in three letter words (consonant-vowel-consonant), they should have no difficulty reading a little book containing only three letter words. If they do at this stage or at more advanced stages where they’ve learned more complicated rules, we need to keep an eye on them.
Is it because they haven’t remembered the rules? If this is the case, they don’t have a decoding issue. They just need to see more examples of the target words, read more, and try to remember the rules.
If they have trouble with p and q, b and d, w and m, etc., they are totally normal and this tendency will go away as their brain matures. There’s nothing to worry about.
However, if they have one or more of the following occurred to them consistantly when reading, they probably have a learning issue.
They’ve learned most of the rules and remembered them, but they got confused within a word because they see letters in *random* orders; and each time the letters switch order randomly.
They skip words, phrases, or even jump sentences.
They see words in a sentence or even on a page in randomly different orders each time they read the same text.
NOT all of these kids are diagnosed with dyslexia. With the right help, NOT all of them even have a permanent condition, especially for young kids between 4 and 7 whose brain is still developing and has better plasticity.
If your child has this problem, there are activities that can help. (If the problem is so severe that every word that they see is “messed up” in random ways every time they read, please talk to a pediatrican to get professional help). But if your child can still read, just constantly gets confused, then trying at home some of the activities that professionals use may make a huge difference.
I will be posting some important activities one by one. Today we start with the first one, “Thumb Eight.” This is one of a series of research supported activities that help (1) the eyes to track better in a liniar fashion and (2) the left hemisphere of the brain to make stronger connections with the right hemisphere. When the eyes can track better liniarly from left to right, reading problems caused by seeing letters and words in randomly wrong places will gradually resolve. The key is to stick with these activities every day for a longer period of time (1-2 years).