Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My brother could identify all his letters at 18 months - and he turned out to be a certified genius. Went to Harvard at 16 and medical school at Yale. He is an oncologist now with two little girls who seem bright but are not geniuses by any measure so far.
And your point is?
That not everyone who can identify letter is on the autistic spectrum or that it means nothing in all cases. My brother could identify all letters and is not autistic nor does he suffer from ADD or ADHD and in his case it was indicative of higher intelligence.
Anonymous wrote:My son could name all of the letters by 18 months. And all of the numbers too. But he couldn't say much else other than the usual baby words such as mama, up, ball, dog, etc. He ended up with an autism diagnosis.
Anonymous wrote:My brother could identify all his letters at 18 months - and he turned out to be a certified genius. Went to Harvard at 16 and medical school at Yale. He is an oncologist now with two little girls who seem bright but are not geniuses by any measure so far.
Anonymous wrote:If you accept the fact that the alphabet ends with LMNOP then yes. If you believe the alternative fact that there are several more letters, then no.
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Both could. One dc at 18 months whom I explicitly taught for some first time mom reason, lol. The younger one around 22 months. That one just watched that letter factory video a few times. That video will teach any toddler!
It didn’t mean much at all. I have personally known a few toddlers who learned their abcs at 2 and then forgot them or went on to learn to read with their kindergarten class.
My older child was tested by a psychologist and has a very high iq. I think at age two it was more telling that this child would listen to a book like the hobbit and fully comprehend it. I’m not even exaggerating.
This. Once we realized this, we didn't bother teaching them to our second child at that age. She will have plenty of time to learn the letter sounds and other actually useful pre-reading concepts in preschool. Naming the letters is barely helpful at all for reading, except for explaining the rule that long vowels "say their name."Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, but it didn't MEAN anything. Still doesn't.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My brother could identify all his letters at 18 months - and he turned out to be a certified genius. Went to Harvard at 16 and medical school at Yale. He is an oncologist now with two little girls who seem bright but are not geniuses by any measure so far.
And your point is?