[nobe-l] working with younger kids

Brandy W branlw at sbcglobal.net
Sun Feb 20 02:26:17 UTC 2011


I did have to learn how to properly form letters. Before I made this a goal
I drew the letters, but for teaching one must know what letters start at
what point on the line and which ones needed to go back over a line etc. It
was fun, and since I'm quite visual it came naturally to me. In my 7 years
getting my degree I never had an aid or anything. If my peers didn't get it
I didn't ask for it. I did higher readers outside of the school, and
sometimes to come in my classrooms during my planning period and such. I
could be wrong, but I think their problem is with her being able to teach
the actual penmanship, not the content. It is kinder they only write a few
sentences at most by the end of the year.

Bran


"Play is to early childhood what gas is to a car," as it's "the very fuel of
every intellectual activity that our children engage in."
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-----Original Message-----
From: nobe-l-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nobe-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of bookwormahb at earthlink.net
Sent: Saturday, February 19, 2011 4:09 PM
To: National Organization of Blind Educators Mailing List
Subject: Re: [nobe-l] working with younger kids

Brandy, you're creative!
Heather, handwriting is a small part of working with young kids of
kindergarten age.
Are you completely blind? Did you learn print?  If you learned print as a
kid, this will be helpful.  There are raised letters out there and raised
line paper, I think APH has it, so even if you are completely blind, you can
learn the letters.
I ask this because if you do not know how to form print letters I don't see
how you can teach it.
If you do know print, couldn't you just demonstrate it on the blackboard or
white board and have something to keep your writing straight?
As for correcting papers, I think you'd need a reader.
That is a reasonable accomodation.  Even without teaching handwriting, there
are many skills you can teach kids.
So suggest other things and I hope you get the job.
You could work with them on reading. They can practice writing and read it
back to you; you can't correct it, but you'd have an idea of what the kids
can write.
Unfortunately, its easy to get discouraged by one thing.

What is your certification in?
I did not go into teaching but thought about it; I decided the elementary ed
program at my school was too much for me; it was difficult to observe
classes, a requirement for the ed classes and I did face many doubts
including from myself.
Still I think  its great for those blind people who do go into education.

Ashley
-----Original Message-----
From: Brandy W
Sent: Saturday, February 19, 2011 3:08 PM
To: 'National Organization of Blind Educators Mailing List'
Subject: Re: [nobe-l] working with younger kids

I teach handwriting in lots of ways. We write in play dough, we write in wet
sand, we use a pen on paper on a pile of news paper or rubber board, we work
on hand strength and memorizing the steps to writing the letter, we use hand
writing practice pages that I have a reader look at later. It isn't easy,
but it can be done. Sometimes I would work with the group doing fine motor
activities why the teacher worked with the kids on the actual paper writing.
She has more problems than handwriting I can promise you.

"Play is to early childhood what gas is to a car," as it's "the very fuel of
every intellectual activity that our children engage in."
Brandy Wojcik  Discovery Toys Educational Consultant and Team leader
(512) 689-5045
www.playtoachieve.com
Follow me on Face Book at
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Discovery-Toys-Play-to-Achieve/190531490961063


Do you want to: *earn extra income?
*get toys for free?
*get sale updates on our award winning products that have never been
recalled?
Just ask!



-----Original Message-----
From: nobe-l-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:nobe-l-bounces at nfbnet.org] On Behalf
Of Heather
Sent: Saturday, February 19, 2011 1:39 PM
To: 'National Organization of Blind Educators Mailing List'
Subject: [nobe-l] working with younger kids

Hello, I applied to work with kindergarten kids part time as I complete my
certification.  The person I was talking to said I would not be a good fit
because I cant teach hand writing skills or correct their papers because I
am blind.  So I am asking if there are teachers who have to deal with this
issue.  And how do they teach hand writing to sighted kids.  Heather


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