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General Parenting
Speech therapy is torture
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<blockquote data-quote="keista" data-source="post: 528482" data-attributes="member: 11965"><p>What letter is it? <img src="/community/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/Graemlins/rofl.gif" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":rofl:" title="rofl :rofl:" data-shortname=":rofl:" /> I remember the pre-k teacher CONSTANTLY complaining that son would do this, or just stare at her. I would just laugh at her. the answer is simple. the child knows the letter, the child knows you know he knows the letter, so the child is wondering what the big whoopdedoo <img src="/community/styles/default/xenforo/smilies/2012/smartass.gif" class="smilie" loading="lazy" alt=":smartass:" title="smartass :smartass:" data-shortname=":smartass:" /> is?!?!?!?</p><p> I don't know if V gives that look, but son did it ALL the time.</p><p></p><p>Anyway my suggestion is electronic educational toys. The kind that have a button for each letter of the alphabet and numbers. Leap frog reading system, ect. My son learned all his states and capitals by age 5 using Leapfrog. Granted, he had difficulty forming a sentence at the time, but he knew his states and capitals AND was able to apply that knowledge.</p><p></p><p>DD1 was very slow on this learning curve, and HATED toys that made noise. My solution was to get such toys for DD2 that year for Christmas. Once DD1 saw DD2 playing with them, they became irresistible. Within a month DD1 knew her alphabet and was recognizing her letters.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="keista, post: 528482, member: 11965"] What letter is it? :rofl: I remember the pre-k teacher CONSTANTLY complaining that son would do this, or just stare at her. I would just laugh at her. the answer is simple. the child knows the letter, the child knows you know he knows the letter, so the child is wondering what the big whoopdedoo :smartass: is?!?!?!? I don't know if V gives that look, but son did it ALL the time. Anyway my suggestion is electronic educational toys. The kind that have a button for each letter of the alphabet and numbers. Leap frog reading system, ect. My son learned all his states and capitals by age 5 using Leapfrog. Granted, he had difficulty forming a sentence at the time, but he knew his states and capitals AND was able to apply that knowledge. DD1 was very slow on this learning curve, and HATED toys that made noise. My solution was to get such toys for DD2 that year for Christmas. Once DD1 saw DD2 playing with them, they became irresistible. Within a month DD1 knew her alphabet and was recognizing her letters. [/QUOTE]
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