Anonymous wrote:.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
Op here. That’s not going to happen. It’s going to drive me crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
+1000
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
And the difference between "raising" and "rising".
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
You need to learn phonics so you can teach him properly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Op here. Yes and the workbook asks stuff like ‘mark the vowel you hear in each word to show whether it has the long or short sound’
‘circle the consonant blends’
‘ on the blank before each word write the sound of the underlined letters
Examples: hauled , spoiled
And ‘ when a root word has a short vowel sound followed by only one consonant, double the final consonant before adding “ed” or “ing”
Anonymous wrote:Does he just not know the difference between vowels and consonants? That's basic memorization. If he's reading well, he should be able to learn which is which fairly easily.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Put a request for child to be evaluated for special education services ASAP.
I recommend Nessy, it is designed for kids with dyslexia.
Op here. He’s doing well with reading. I don’t think he has dyslexia but maybe it’s hard to know sometimes? He gets books in the mail and learns the tricky words through an app. We’ve been doing that for 2 years. He mostly learned everything at school . We did group tutoring here and there but not because school said he was behind. My sister teaches kindergarten and she said in the past a lot of kids would learn through memorizing but now they are pushing phonics more. I am very bad at pronunciation. I usually just avoid words I can’t sound out or look them up online. It hasn’t held me back too much but I would like better for my child of course.
Anonymous wrote:Put a request for child to be evaluated for special education services ASAP.
I recommend Nessy, it is designed for kids with dyslexia.