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Reading/Spelling - do you visualise?

58 replies

PenElse · 20/10/2017 17:23

I'm doing a little bit of research, and would really appreciate any responses on the following (for you, and your child if possible)

POLL: Can you mentally picture a word like 'cabbage' or 'bike' (for small kids) clearly enough to spell it backwards? Are you a good speller?

  1. Yes - I'm a good speller
  2. Yes - I'm a poor speller
  3. No - I'm a good speller
  4. No - I'm a poor speller

Are you and your child the same? Different?

Thank you!

Pen

OP posts:
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Norestformrz · 20/10/2017 17:30
  1. Why would you want to spell it backwards?
  2. What if you have more than one child?
SandLand · 20/10/2017 17:31

4

Spell a word backwards???? What kind of hell is that? Hard enough to go forwards.

PenElse · 20/10/2017 17:38

Well, you wouldn't normally be spelling things backwards(!), but it's a good way to tell how well the letters are being visualised.

The more children the merrier! I'm interested in it all.

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bruffin · 20/10/2017 17:41

No cannit picture words at all
I learned rules
I hear the sounds
I say it wrong ( ie Wed Nes Day)
Spelling is good , but im in a house full of dyslexics who rely on me for spelling.

bruffin · 20/10/2017 17:42

But as you can see i cant type on a phoneSmile

PenElse · 20/10/2017 17:44

@bruffin - goodness! No pressure, then.....

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SandLand · 20/10/2017 17:49

Why would you visualise a word? DH goes on about this to DS1 (who can't spell) and I don't understand it. He can't explain it to me.
DS2 looks to be a better speller.

llangennith · 20/10/2017 18:02

I visualise. See it in my mind on the page. DD1 (Mensa IQ) doesn't do this naturally but worked at it. She remembers stuff better if she hears it. I have to read it.
DGS2&3 are not good spellers and can't visualise but they remember everything they hear and have learnt loads from Audio books.

PenElse · 20/10/2017 18:09

@SandLand - oh, a mixed group, interesting!

Research suggests that good spellers routinely visualise words and can 'read the letters off' to write them down. Poor spellers seem not to do so. There could be any number of reasons for this, eg a tendency towards the 3-dimensional - so a brain that moves too fast for slow 2-D reading. Or, perhaps Visualisation isn't their particular strength so they've never realised it would help and don't quite know how to do it.

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PenElse · 20/10/2017 18:12

@llangennith Wow, for me it's in one ear and out the other... I have to see things. Lectures were always a nightmare for me - talk talk talk...

I'm curious to know how your audio children organise the information in their minds once they hear it? How do they 'search' their memories?

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Norestformrz · 20/10/2017 18:16

Well, you wouldn't normally be spelling things backwards(!), but it's a good way to tell how well the letters are being visualised. HmmConfusedBiscuit.** Not bliddy magical spelling?

PenElse · 20/10/2017 18:26

@Norestformrz Er, what...?

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Norestformrz · 20/10/2017 18:30

In the Magical Spelling program children are taught to visualise words forwards and backwards utter nonsense!

sirfredfredgeorge · 20/10/2017 18:43

but it's a good way to tell how well the letters are being visualised

Why is it? how would distinguish it from a simple working memory span test (spell it normally, remember and repeat back?)

grasspigeons · 20/10/2017 18:56

I 'visualise' the word to spell it backwards, but I am very poor at spelling, so I would spell it wrong backwards or forwards, but they'd be the same mistake if that makes sense.

I am getting better through learning phonics with my children! My children are poor at spelling too. I don't know what they do to spell.

PenElse · 20/10/2017 18:57

@Norestformrz: I've worked very effectively with dyslexics by using similar methods, by the looks of it. I'm not, however, selling any such services.

@sirfredfredgeorge: I mean in the context of a visualisation exercise.

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LittleBearPad · 20/10/2017 19:00

I visualise words. I’m a good speller.

DD (5) apparently can’t but she’s watching paw patrol so very uninterested in the experiment.

PenElse · 20/10/2017 19:02

@grasspigeons Ha ha, classic! I remember helping a friend's daughter with her spelling and got a bit ahead of myself - "I know, let's try a harder one, how about 'mediterranean'? It was only then I realised I wasn't sure how to spell it... I had to look it up and write it down first: medi/terra/nean.

Never lost it since, especially as the first two syllables mean 'middle earth'

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MrsElf · 20/10/2017 19:03

1 for me and DH. No DC here to ask, sorry. PenElse - I struggled with lectures too - I learnt to write REALLY REALLY fast, and looking at my notes (from a depressingly long time ago), it's like I'm back in the lecture theatre again! What I didn't get down, I wouldn't even know I'd forgotten though.

Norestformrz · 20/10/2017 19:04

Etymology is a great help with spelling

PenElse · 20/10/2017 19:05

@LittleBearPad: Ha ! Probably hard to explain the exercise to a 5 yr old... Perhaps she can juggle the Paw Patrol characters around in her mind instead.

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Chickenkatsu · 20/10/2017 19:06

What's the magical spelling program?

I've taught myself to visualise and I can easily spell them backwards, it's a really useful skill. It helps if you see them as scrabble letters.

Norestformrz · 20/10/2017 19:08

You need to visualise frogs then spell rhinoceros backwards

PenElse · 20/10/2017 19:10

@Norestformrz It certainly is a help! I've played with etymologically-based word lists before, eg: where -gress means 'move/step'
Digress
Regress
Progress
Aggress
Congress
Ingress etc etc

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PenElse · 20/10/2017 19:13

@Chickenkatsu It seems to be a training programme for improving spelling - based on NLP methods. Fairly simple stuff, I think.

Yes, a very useful skill - and tricky for many, unfortunately.

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