| Nope, no responses.
We did have a conference with the teacher, and she did note that
there were several teaching materials that they do use that teach material
nonverbally. But that was last year, and we haven't had a conference with
the teacher this year yet. I have had some success in math, when Gary was
having trouble borrowing from zero, in using pictures instead of numbers to
demonstrate.
Clay
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| [ Mail message posted with permission of the author (Lucy Patton); when I
extracted, the mail header was stripped.]
Clay,
I had a nice reply all typed up for the Parenting conference and lost my
link...grrr...so here it is in Mail.
I was thinking over the weekend about this (I missed your original basenote
and just came across this at the end of last week). I was wondering if you
had looked into the Montessori materials and methods?
Not to come across as a real zealot or anything, but I have been very
impressed with how the teachers introduce new work silently, so that children
don't rely on the spoken word. The materials are designed to be
used non-verbally, as well.
(In math, I'm thinking of the monomial, binomial and trinomial cubes, which
at their most advanced level of abstract understanding, teach algebraic
relationships. There are a lot of materials like this.) The curriculum goes
through the eighth grade, I believe.
I have some references for published work on Montessori teaching, but nothing
in my own library that would be very helpful. Let me know if you want the
references, anyway. Also, there is a national association that could point
you to people and materials, if you were interested.
This is an interesting subject. I bet a lot of kids are non-verbal learners.
Lucy
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