Helping Your Child Learn Sight Words at Home

We often get emailed questions from parents on how to help their children. As I answered this question, I thought that the content might make a great blog post, so I decided to post it here. I hope it is helpful to you!




Question:

"My son is a special needs child who is having difficulty remembering sight words. Do you know of success stories (using HeidiSongs) with special needs children and what exactly do I need to start with?"

Answer:

We have heard from many, many special ed teachers over the years that swear by our products, so I am certain that they are good for children with special needs! I have also had lots of special needs children in my own class over the years who have responded well to my products and methods. (Some children were as yet unidentified, and some were mainstreamed.)

I have written a few blog posts specifically on how to help children learn the sight words. Here is one blog post called, Tips for Using Sight Word Songs Effectively in the Classroom.

Here is a link to another blog post, called "How I Got 18 Out of 23 Kids to Master 100% of their Sight Words" is really more focused on classroom instruction, but there might be some bits of information in there that could be useful to you.


When your child is working on sight words using HeidiSongs Sight Word Songs videos, here are the main things to remember:

1.  Your child should be up and moving along with the video, not seated and passively watching.  They should be singing along as much as they can, and doing the movements, and watching the screen.  If your child needs help learning the words, then watch one song through together, and then pause it and try to sing or say the words together slowly until he gets it.  Then put the video back on and try to sing it with the video.




The thing that puts it into the brain and holds it there is the multi-sensory mix of seeing it, saying it, hearing it, and doing it, all at the same time!  So whatever it takes to get your child to do all of these things at once is what you need to happen.  It usually takes a child a few times through a video collection to get to the point where they start to memorize some of the songs. It will probably go faster for you if you just work on a few songs at a time, but it really depends on how engaged and excited your child is about the process.




2.  Scatter a bunch of flash cards on a coffee table or on the floor nearby the television set.  Once your child finishes watching a word song, have him or her find a flash card with that word on it.  Have your child read the word to you and then touch the letters, spelling it aloud.




3.  Another time while your child is watching, have your child grab a piece of paper and write each word after the song plays, pausing the video as is necessary.  Have him or her tell you what word it is.  




4.  Another time when your child is watching, pause the video after a word that you know is hard for your child to remember.  Give your child some play dough and have him or her roll the dough into a snake and then form the letters of the word out of the dough.  Have your child touch the letters and feel the word, saying the word as he does so.  Then ask him to spell it aloud to you before squishing it up and starting over.




5.  Another time when your child is watching, pause the videos between words. Have them find a flash card with that word on it. Have them jump or hop one time for each letter while spelling it aloud.




6.  You may wish to also get our albums on iTunes that goes with the videos so that you can play the songs in the car as you drive from place to place. Give your child a dry erase board and some markers to keep in the car, and have him write the words that go with each song that is playing.  If it is hard for him to visualize what the words look like, keep some flashcards on a chicken ring in the car as well so he can refer to them.  If you keep them on the ring in order, it will be easier for him or her to use.




7.  As your child gets better and better at the learning the words in a certain video collection, then you may want to try this: a teacher friend of mine used to have her grand daughter watch my videos in her classroom after school each day and write the words as the songs played. The deal she made with her was that if she could write the word without even looking at the screen (just by listening to the song and hearing the intro!) she could forward the collection to the next song/video right away and get that much closer to play time. You wouldn't believe how good she got at identifying the word,  using only the intro!


Have fun, and good luck!

Heidi




Parents and teachers, do you know another great way to help children learn sight words at home? Do you have an idea for helping special needs children that really helps these tricky words "stick?" Please share!

Thanks!

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