Monday, January 8, 2018
How Samantha Learned to Read
How Samantha Learned to Read
Samantha, a sixteen year old who has Rett Syndrome is not the first teenager with significant special needs I have worked with who has accomplished basic literacy, and I know she will not be the last. I believe that literacy is a life skill and a human right. Ive featured Samantha as she has learned to read on this blog twice. Recently I have been asked how it was she learned to read and if we followed any curriculum.

Believing She Could
This goes without saying, but presuming competence and believing that Samantha could and would learn to communicate and read was the first step. She needed to be reminded constantly that though she battled Rett Syndrome taking away use of her hands, dystonia forcing her eyes up and head back and seizures that interrupted everything she was smart and could learn to read.
Print Rich Enviroment
Letters and Their Sounds
For Samantha the journey started with her interest in letters and their sounds, and more specifically, her interest in how the mouth makes sounds. She was fascinated by how mouths would move to make sounds, happily watching my mouth, video clips and trying to move her own mouth into the shape of a sound. Though she rarely was able to reproduce the sound of a phoneme she often got close to making the right shape with her mouth. Samanthas interest in watching how mouths made sounds lead us to the free Small Talk Phonemes (and later the Small Talk Blends) app on her iPad. We spent many months matching letters printed on cards, letter manipulatives and letters written on a white board to the sounds that they make. Samantha played with letter sounds using manipulatives and playing games. She did some "scribbling" with letters using the LiterAACy software program on her Tobii Communication Device. We also used a lot of music videos. You can find a music video for just about any phonics concept on YouTube. We used the Niki Play app to give us easy access to our favorite phonics and literacy music videos. Like most learners with apraxia, Samantha does not do well with on demand assessment so we surreptitiously assessed for the knowledge of one to two letter sounds per session. Mastery was assumed when she correctly matched the letter to the sound and vice versa just twice, allowing us to move forward and not cause boredom or anxiety with repeated testing.
Segmenting and Blending
Digraphs, Diphthongs, Double Vowels and More
Now that Samantha had a grasp of all the basic phonemes and how to spell and read most CVC words, we began work on blends, double vowels and a variety of phonics rules. This continues to be a slow process. We work on these concepts as they present themselves. For instance, when Samantha spelled the word "blu" using an alternative pencil we began a journey learning about double vowels and specifically "ue". We watched music videos and an instructional video on YouTube. We looked at other words. I keep a list of phonics rules, digraphs, diphthongs and other information to check off as we work through these things at Samanthas pace based on her interest.
Reading for Meaning