Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds normal, unfortunately. Kids learn much better with pencil and paper and books/workbooks/worksheets than they do on the ipad/chromebook. Some teachers know this and will use paper, many don't or don't bother.
OP explained that it's exactly the opposite. Kid does better on the iPad
Anonymous wrote:'Anonymous wrote:Try having him use a card to cover everything below the row he's working on, and move down line by line and question by question, to practice tracking the whole contents of a printed sheet in order.
I was going to suggest this - my child's tutor suggested this when she's working on worksheets. Just take a piece of paper and cover up the other questions.
(It's not dysgraphia, it's not ADHD, it's just hard to focus on a lot of words on a worksheet.)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dyslexia specifically has an issue with instruction that have 3 or more steps.
This is OP. Yes, I'm asking to see if this is common with school tablet use, because I do hear about dyslexia, ADHD, but don't really have experience with it and haven't gotten 7 yo tested for anything. The tip to use a piece of paper to cover the other questions is a good one, I'll pass that on and see if that helps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Dyslexia specifically has an issue with instruction that have 3 or more steps.
This is OP. Yes, I'm asking to see if this is common with school tablet use, because I do hear about dyslexia, ADHD, but don't really have experience with it and haven't gotten 7 yo tested for anything. The tip to use a piece of paper to cover the other questions is a good one, I'll pass that on and see if that helps.
Anonymous wrote:Dyslexia specifically has an issue with instruction that have 3 or more steps.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He can read. He can do all the work - math and literacy - on the iPad at school. I suspect this is because the iPad presents things question by question, and require he hits an arrow or push a button, so he can't miss things. I've been having him do work on paper at home because I believe at least a little math should be done on paper. On the first page he skipped an entire row of question. Another day, he skipped reading "odd" and "even" and just put it an answer (but for the wrong question. It was asking about an odd number and he put an even number).
Basically I can't get him to read the directions, follow the directions, and follow the paper... He does all of this electronically at school just fine. Is anyone else seeing this kind of thing?
7 years old! He's fine. Bless the iPad for helping him learn without being held back by the worksheet format.
Is your job worksheets?
Anonymous wrote:He can read. He can do all the work - math and literacy - on the iPad at school. I suspect this is because the iPad presents things question by question, and require he hits an arrow or push a button, so he can't miss things. I've been having him do work on paper at home because I believe at least a little math should be done on paper. On the first page he skipped an entire row of question. Another day, he skipped reading "odd" and "even" and just put it an answer (but for the wrong question. It was asking about an odd number and he put an even number).
Basically I can't get him to read the directions, follow the directions, and follow the paper... He does all of this electronically at school just fine. Is anyone else seeing this kind of thing?