my3sons wrote:How long have your kiddos been doing dictation?
We did Level 2 in Preparing last year. However, I wanted them to stay on the same passage so instead of redoing the passage each time, I had them write the word they missed 3 times and then write a sentence with it. If they missed the punctuation they had to write the sentence again with correct punctuation marks. I regret that now because that is probably part of the problem. You know how you begin doing something a certain way at the beginning of the year and it just kind of sticks? I didn't even remember I was doing it wrong until the end of the year. I decided I didn't care if I had to call out 2 different passages we are doing it right this year. They are on Level 3 in CTC. Trying to lump them together in things to save time is a temptation for me that I'm now trying correct. In fact I wish I would have put dd in Bigger last year as I think she should really be in Preparing this year but I don't think she would want to hear it all over again now.
my3sons wrote:Maybe when he's studying for his dictation you could remind him to carefully notice each punctuation mark? Have him read it aloud and pause at each mark, putting his finger under it, and closing his eyes to picture where it will go and also listening for when the pauses make sense. I've heard my ds mutter during his study time "2 periods, 3 commas", as a way to remember how many to include. I do pause briefly at punctuation marks as I read the phrases aloud as well, as this is how it should be read aloud properly anyway. I don't do extremely long pauses to make it overly obvious, but I do read it pausing an appropriate length of time for punctuation.
These are great ideas! I'll try it this year. I think your son's idea of counting how many punctuation marks will help my ds.
my3sons wrote: Is he missing a passage every day, or is it just a few times a week? I hope something here helps! But if you think of anything else to share about how it's going, we could chat through it more!
Yes they are both missing a passage every day and oddly enough they are still on the same passage having missed them the same amount of times too. Go figure. Anyway, here's an example of what they get wrong. We are on passage 3 of Level 3.
DS's passage with mistakes in red.
all plants have a root, a stem, and
leavs.
most plants also have flowers, fruit, and seeds.
can you find each part
?
For some reason ds decided to forget all 3 capitals on this particular day. Forgetting capitals is something he has struggled with a lot over the years.
DD's passage.
All plants have a root, a stem, and leaves. Most plants also
have flower
s, fruit, and seeds. Can you find each part
?
She completely forgot the word have. This is very common for her. She left off the s in flowers. This is common also. She reads plurals as if they were singular all the time. It's as if she doesn't see the s on the end. She doesn't forget capitals or punctuation nearly as often as ds. It's usually a spelling mistake or a missing word with her.
They both forgot the question mark in this one.
Thank you so much for your detailed response Julie!
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I am excited to get them on the right track with dictation.
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