Jump to content

Menu

Spelling Workout placement question


Recommended Posts

My dyslexic dd has only really made huge progress in reading this year, going from about a 2nd grade reading level to just about on grade level (6th). Since we were so focused on reading, we did not focus a lot on spelling, and it turns out she has terrible spelling... very phonetic approach that is not working well. I am looking for something simple and straightforward, and like the looks of Spelling Workout, but I have no idea where to place her!

 

Any advice? I don't mind starting her fairly low in the sequence and working though it more quickly if that works for her.

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How fantastic that she has made such amazing progress in her reading! Kudos to both of you :)

 

Dyslexics usually have as much (if not more) difficulty with spelling as with reading, so that's perfectly normal. It sounds like a good time to start doing some work in that area. I wouldn't necessarily recommend Spelling Workout, however. For a dyslexic, you really need an explicit, step-by-step approach designed for struggling readers/spellers.

 

I would look into All About Spelling, Apples and Pears and Sequential Spelling. I believe AAS has placement tests, I'm not sure about the others. Be prepared that her spelling level may still be several grade levels below her current reading level. If she is at a point to work with multi-syllable words (grade 4 and up), you could try Megawords.

 

HTH!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I would also advise you to go a different route than Spelling Workout. Apples &Pears (I know, weird name, but excellent program) has a great track record with dyslexics. It will require one-on-one for each lesson, but it is open and go with no prep time required.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

As someone whose kid went all the way through Spelling Workout at grade level, I would find a spelling program that is geared towards dyslexic kids. Spelling Workout was fine for my intuitive speller, but my worried, insecure speller is doing much better with Rod and Staff. SW just provides so little instruction. It is a lot of rote copying. I just feel like a dyslexic kid has fairly specific needs with a spelling program.

 

If you really think SW is the best program to meet your kids specific needs, I am taking a blind guess, but maybe 3rd or fourth grade and then work forward. You absolutely do not need the teacher's book because it is just a filled in workbook.

 

 

Oh..and look at samples of SW, maybe at Rainbow? Because it might switch to cursive in the spelling book, but I can't remember.  I know R&S does in 4th grade because my 4th grader has a difficult time with it and he grumbled quite a lot at the beginning of the year.

 

And a big congratulations to both of you on the big strides! 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

How fantastic that she has made such amazing progress in her reading! Kudos to both of you :)

 

Dyslexics usually have as much (if not more) difficulty with spelling as with reading, so that's perfectly normal. It sounds like a good time to start doing some work in that area. I wouldn't necessarily recommend Spelling Workout, however. For a dyslexic, you really need an explicit, step-by-step approach designed for struggling readers/spellers.

 

I would look into All About Spelling, Apples and Pears and Sequential Spelling. I believe AAS has placement tests, I'm not sure about the others. Be prepared that her spelling level may still be several grade levels below her current reading level. If she is at a point to work with multi-syllable words (grade 4 and up), you could try Megawords.

 

HTH!

 

Yes, her spelling is definitely a few grade levels below her reading at this point, so I am prepared to "backtrack".

 

I would also advise you to go a different route than Spelling Workout. Apples &Pears (I know, weird name, but excellent program) has a great track record with dyslexics. It will require one-on-one for each lesson, but it is open and go with no prep time required.

 

Since you both recommended it, I will definitely check out Apples & Pears.

 

As someone whose kid went all the way through Spelling Workout at grade level, I would find a spelling program that is geared towards dyslexic kids. Spelling Workout was fine for my intuitive speller, but my worried, insecure speller is doing much better with Rod and Staff. SW just provides so little instruction. It is a lot of rote copying. I just feel like a dyslexic kid has fairly specific needs with a spelling program.

 

If you really think SW is the best program to meet your kids specific needs, I am taking a blind guess, but maybe 3rd or fourth grade and then work forward. You absolutely do not need the teacher's book because it is just a filled in workbook.

 

 

Oh..and look at samples of SW, maybe at Rainbow? Because it might switch to cursive in the spelling book, but I can't remember.  I know R&S does in 4th grade because my 4th grader has a difficult time with it and he grumbled quite a lot at the beginning of the year.

 

And a big congratulations to both of you on the big strides! 

 

I think level C is where it switches, but has both print and cursive side-by-side.

 

Question for you, is the spelling from Rod & Staff explicitly religious?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

I think level C is where it switches, but has both print and cursive side-by-side.

 

Question for you, is the spelling from Rod & Staff explicitly religious?

 

It is explicitly religious. Very. At least once a book we get to skip an entire chapter because all the spelling words are titles of books in the Bible (at least I think they are, lol). And this year, in 4th grade every chapter ends with a bible activity.  But we have learned to just skip bits or ignore parts.  There is so, so much in every week's lesson that it is super easy to skip specific questions and occasionally whole exercises. I use R&S grammar starting in 5th grade so its all a bit 'down the hatch' at this point.

 

I know I mentioned R&S spelling as one that was a good fit for my nervous speller but I am not so sure how it would work for a dyslexic kiddo.  I was just thinking that maybe other spelling books also switch from print to cursive.  I've only used SW and R&S, so I don't know if they all do.  It made my ds2 VERY unhappy, so I can imagine a kid who struggles with reading wouldn't be thrilled, kwim?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

×
×
  • Create New...