Show # 99- Elaine Weitzman, Hanen Centre
In this episode, I talk with Elaine Weitzman from the Hanen Centre. The Hanen Centre is an international organization focused on helping parents and educators enhance the language and literacy skills of young children. The programs they have been developed are research-based and the information they offer parents is practical, easy, every day things we can do to truly enhance how our children learn.
The Hanen centre has come out with a yearly calendar that gives parents and teachers a month by month, week by week resource of how to specifically help build critical language skills for young children. This is a straight-forward, easy to use guide to doing simple things that can have a big, long term impact on your child’s education and literacy.
To give you some perspective on how important this is, a recent show entitled “Going Big” on This American Life by Ira Glass featured a segment regarding the Harlem Children’s Zone, an ambitious program focused on helping parents help their children in the same way the Hanen Centre does- and it’s working miracles in terms of improving children’s scholastic outcomes.
It’s simple things, like reading to your child, asking them questions, talking about emotions, answering those endles “Why?” questions that help spark your child’s curiosity about the world and encourage them to develop these critical skills necessary for later literacy and academic success.
Please contact the Hanen Centre through their website at www.hanen.org. The calendar for 2009 is now available, and sample months are available on their website.
Click here to listen to Elaine Weitzman, Hanen Center- Developing Early Language Skills with your kids
Sharon Martin, Speech and Language Pathologist
In today’s show, we feature an interview with Sharon Martin!
She has also participated in specialized training and tasks forces involved with Response to Intervention (RTI), literacy/language interventions, and special education regulations.
In this show, I also talk about the results of our “Daily journal” over the summer experiment, getting kids back to school and trying to keep them organized. One question I received by email recently asked:
“What type of planner or organizer would you recommend for kids with LD? The one we get from school has really small writing areas, making it hard to fit in all the information, let alone notes back and forth from home and school.”
My recommendations:
What most kids need: Big space to write, securely bound, monthly and weekly views.
What I’ve tried for myself and the kids:
Personal Digital Assistants, like Palm Pilots; various calendars and systems, wall calendars, wipe-off dry erase calendars, etc. Electronic versions of calendars, ranging from Google Calendar, to the calendar/alarms on my various cell phones, and Skoach, an online calendar/task management system developed in part by well-known and respected ADHD researcher, Dr. Kathleen Nadeau. (Also a prior guest on the LD Podcast).
What Really Works for Me- paper calendar/agenda with both weekly and monthly views. Usually, the medium to large ones give me enough writing space- mini ones are far too small.
Brands I like:
Mead actually has a a website to help you choose a planner (I was surprised to find this out!)
The Quick Notes Calendar from At-A-Glance has weekly and monthly view, along with plenty of spaces for notes and reminders. This runs about $20.00
TimeToo has some interesting looking family trackers, but you kinda have to choose between weekly on monthly, not both. The RSVP space on the bottom is a great idea- these are almost perfect.
The GoMom planner from Daytimer has that weekly/monthly views, and is a good basic planner-a “mommed” up version of the At A Glance.
Mead Upperclass Student Organizer – Available plain ($12.99) or with a bungee cord to keep closed ($13.79) This one can work well with kids or adults- not a bad choice for that master family calendar.
Secret Indulgence and Pricey Version- Levenger has a bunch of interesting products, based on it’s “circa” system- a way you can pretty much customize notebooks. This means you can add what you need- to do lists, expense reports, notes, etc. and rearrange, without losing anything and maintaining the pages securely fastened together. (If you wanted to try it to see if it works, the 2008 agenda is down to only $4.95, and might be a good investment if you think you might like the flexibility it offers.)
Downsides- expensive and addictive. Runs calendar year, not academic year.
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