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My Other Brother Daryl

An ironic look at special education from TASH Newsletter, December 1987. "A Case For Teaching Functional Skills". A well-written cautionary tale that teachers should read.

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The School Survival Guide for Kids With LD

Note: Review only, product no longer for sale.

Sequel to the original ' Survival Guide for Kids With LD ' written in response to young readers' requests.

Written in response to young readers' requests, this sequel to the original "Survival Guide for Kids With LD" presents tips and stretegies for building confidence in skill areas (reading, writing, spelling, math) handling conflict, managing time, coping with testing, getting help from adults, staying out of trouble and more. Grade 2/3 reading level. 176 pages 6" x 9" illus. readability tested at level 2.7.

P0183


The School Survival Guide for Kids With LD

Typical Access Profile

Auditory

Normal
Low
Extremely Low
Not Using Hearing
Hyper-Acute

Vision

Normal
Low
Extremely Low
Not Using Vision

Gross Motor

All
Some
Few
Not Using Gross Motor

Fine Motor

All
Some
Few
Not Using Fine Motor

Developmental Age Range

0 - 2
3 - 5
6 - 8
9 - 12
13 and Over

Language

Typical
Some Spoken
Receptive Only
Sign
Assistive/Augmentitive
Not Using Language
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Eight In A Row: Developing Pre-Reading Skills

Before a child can learn to read, there are essential "pre-reading" skills that a child must master. Three of the most important are sequencing, left-right progression, and time progression (before and after). All can be explored and practiced with Eight In A Row. The puzzles show scenes that are familiar to most children. There is a child making a painting and a child getting up in the morning. Each piece has only one place to fit it onto the next piece, so children with delayed fine motor skills can usually manage the puzzle-fitting with a minimum of frustration.

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