Doris Baker
ASIN: B00IQHFY8C
Publisher: Doris Baker
Pages: 62
The fundamentals of any phonetic language like English and Hebrew start with sound. We hook sound to letters and letters to words. Then words become pictures, and we don’t think about sounds until we need to sound out a word.
But what if you have difficulty identifying individual sounds so you can easily connect that sound to a letter or letter pattern? What if you need more letter/sound practice and perhaps a different kind of practice than the person who does this efficiently and automatically? You are at a serious disadvantage in school and in life.
MRI imaging shows that as many as 1 in 5 people, usually labeled dyslexics, process language more on the right side of the brain, slowing down the ability to read and spell accurately and fluidly. Often these people have language strengths as well, such as comprehension through stories.
So maybe, just maybe, if dyslexics have a way ...