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Speech therapy is torture
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<blockquote data-quote="DammitJanet" data-source="post: 528485" data-attributes="member: 1514"><p>Ok he is 4 right? We had a whole lot of trouble with Keyana learning her letters and sounds when she was in Head Start and in Pre-K. I have no idea how she is doing in Kindergarten other than the week she was here at Xmas and she seemed to be doing much better.</p><p></p><p>I thought I was going to pull my hair out because I would show her a letter, draw it with her, say it..we would go A Ahhh... then ten minutes later she couldnt tell me what it was for love nor money. I had every gadget and gizmo known to mankind to help her too. If leap frog or vtech made it, I bought it. We played games online. She simply didnt care. She could spell her name because I made it into a song. She recognized K's everywhere. That was her favorite letter.</p><p></p><p>Finally by the time she turned 5 and was ready to leave us, I had her so she knew the first letter of all of our names and I thought I had done a real good job there...lol. She had to know P, J, L, D, B because those were the numbers programmed into her phone. P is Papa, J is me, L is grandma Linda, D is Daddy, and B is Uncle Billy. </p><p></p><p>Now Billy was much different. He was not dyslexic but he had dysgraphia and writing for him was extremely hard. We had to use manipulatives for him to learn letters and spelling. We did pudding and rice and playdough even writing the letters on his hands. Or his back. Things were interesting in my house. LOL. I had two dancing on the ceilings and one who was learning disabled.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="DammitJanet, post: 528485, member: 1514"] Ok he is 4 right? We had a whole lot of trouble with Keyana learning her letters and sounds when she was in Head Start and in Pre-K. I have no idea how she is doing in Kindergarten other than the week she was here at Xmas and she seemed to be doing much better. I thought I was going to pull my hair out because I would show her a letter, draw it with her, say it..we would go A Ahhh... then ten minutes later she couldnt tell me what it was for love nor money. I had every gadget and gizmo known to mankind to help her too. If leap frog or vtech made it, I bought it. We played games online. She simply didnt care. She could spell her name because I made it into a song. She recognized K's everywhere. That was her favorite letter. Finally by the time she turned 5 and was ready to leave us, I had her so she knew the first letter of all of our names and I thought I had done a real good job there...lol. She had to know P, J, L, D, B because those were the numbers programmed into her phone. P is Papa, J is me, L is grandma Linda, D is Daddy, and B is Uncle Billy. Now Billy was much different. He was not dyslexic but he had dysgraphia and writing for him was extremely hard. We had to use manipulatives for him to learn letters and spelling. We did pudding and rice and playdough even writing the letters on his hands. Or his back. Things were interesting in my house. LOL. I had two dancing on the ceilings and one who was learning disabled. [/QUOTE]
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