laura.anne
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2011
- Messages
- 208
15yo is really struggling with reading/comprehension/analysis. She hates to read as it is. Got a late start due to vision tracking problems, has Asperger's and selective mutism, so the whole process was torture for her. I have been unsuccessful in finding a single genre or author that interests her (and believe me, we've tried). I've considered buying her a Nook (she's not a fan of my Kindle, prefers the color/shiny/backlit), but I don't want to spend the money if it isn't going to help her move forward.
We are using Life With Fred for math and she seems to be OK with that, although struggling here and there (she's a math-phobe, too). I kinda lost it with her the other day and told her to research it and choose 4 books that she wants to read for school, the only requirement is that they come from a 9th grade book list. She's still not found anything. I can't just hand her Huckleberry Finn and have her get through it, much less understand. I had Hound of the Baskervilles on my Kindle and had her read the first bit, but when we went to talk about it, she had no idea the Holmes had insulted Watson even though she could give me a general gist of the story so far. Things like plot, characterization, climax are all foreign to her.
I used to be an English teacher for a short time. I should be a trained professional, but to be honest, I NEVER had a student who could not comprehend and re-interpret what he'd read. None of my coursework prepared me for this. I'm simply at a loss.
Does anyone have any suggestions for reading comprehension exercises that won't make a high schooler feel "stupid"?
ETA: she writes just fine, but cannot create fiction. It has to be fact-based, research type stuff. She struggles somewhat, but can do it.
Do you allow her to watch movies as part of your curriculum? It might help to do something like reading and comparing with a movie adaptation (or even a Wishbone adaptation, if that wouldn't make her feel babyish). As an Aspy myself (although we are definitely not all alike) one thing that my brain fixates on is differences and similarities as well as categorizing, so that's something I immediately thought of. I will be thinking about this as I go to bed tonight... hope you find something that works!
