caedmyn Posted July 25, 2017 Share Posted July 25, 2017 I've found lots of posts with references to this, but not the actual instructions. Does anyone have a link to the thread with the actual instructions? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterPan Posted July 26, 2017 Share Posted July 26, 2017 (edited) Gonna teach you to fish. :) To site search, type the terms plus site:welltrainedmind.com So if you type "heathermomster metronome site:welltrainedmind.com" into your google bar, you get https://www.google.com/search?client=safari&rls=en&q=heathermomster+metronome+site:welltrainedmind.com&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8 Hit #1 has the instructions. Calling Heathermomster or another metronome guru - The Learning Challenges Board - The Well-Trained Mind Community SaveSave Edited July 26, 2017 by OhElizabeth Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
caedmyn Posted July 26, 2017 Author Share Posted July 26, 2017 This is what everyone is referring to?? Son's IM went something like this...Set the metronome for 54 BPM.Week 1 - straight clapping for 20 minutes, 5 times per weekWeek 2 on out, 5 days per week straight clapping 5 minutes 5 minutes of bouncing a basketball to the beat 5 minutes clap, right stomp, left stomp 5 minutes right thigh slap, left thigh slap, right stomp, left stomp DS hated it BTW and did this for 6 weeks maybe. I imagine the added variety forces them to concentrate and auto correct when they start to drift. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterPan Posted July 26, 2017 Share Posted July 26, 2017 Yup! Deceptively simple. And then, when that gets easy, you can add in digit spans, distractions (noisy kids, radio...), etc. I think I mention that in some of the posts. My thinking, when we did it, was that we were trying to merge motor planning, word retrieval, and ability to hold your thoughts, and ability to handle distractions. Those are all the skills you need to come together for writing to work, and indeed after doing that my dd's writing took off. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Heathermomster Posted July 27, 2017 Share Posted July 27, 2017 I minute of clapping at 54bpm can feel like an eternity. DS also worked with an OT. My description is homework. 1 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
PeterPan Posted July 27, 2017 Share Posted July 27, 2017 For the op, my ds couldn't clap AT ALL when we started, not a single clap. He'd go into hyper clap. For him, I had some reduced activities, like clapping while I touched letters of the alphabet on an alphabet puzzle. So I don't know which dc this is for, but, like Heather is saying, there's a lot you can do with it to modify and adapt and make it custom, stuff a therapist would do, stuff you can invent. I found that almost anything you invented turned out to be useful, because you're harnessing that part of the brain. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
caedmyn Posted July 27, 2017 Author Share Posted July 27, 2017 I think all my school-age kids could use it. The 6 YO to maybe help with his fluency, and the older two to help them focus. I'm not sure I could get the younger two to do it though.I've done a little bit of RAN work with the boys with some pages I got off Teachers Pay Teachers and they are so slow...14 seconds a page is the fastest they go. DD's fastest is 12 seconds. I can do the pages in 6 seconds. Idk how much that has to do with the 6 YOs fluency issues though, because he's just as fast as his brother and the 8 YO is much more fluent than he is. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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