| A Note from Dr. Cooper:
As a child psychologist, I've spent the past twenty years
teaching children how to read.
The other day, I sat down with a lovely little boy whose
parents and teachers had done all they could to teach him
to read. I looked at him, held his hand and said, "Every
sound I'm going to teach you in this program will always
be the same, no matter what letter is before or after it."
He looked back at me with big, hopeful eyes, and he
said, "You promise?"
You see, being a child in an adult world can be very
confusing. And in order to learn, you need a sense of
security. But when they're changing the game plan on you
every other moment, and teaching all the exceptions
before you know the rules, you're ready to give up before
you've even started. That's why only some children
respond to the methods used in schools today.
Security and consistency - that's the underlying premise
of how I teach; I provide the child a stable, predictable
basis to start with. And from there he can sail forth to
make sense of the world.
I start by teaching the simple, short vowel sound of "a" --
not the name of the letter, which often has no correlation
to how it sounds. And when the child starts out, every
time he sees this letter, he'll know that it says, "a", no
matter what comes before or what comes after.
Then I help the child move along step by step, each one
at his own pace, learning the sounds letters make and
thus becoming a master of all the most stable aspects of
decoding the written word.
Once the child has that firm foundation, he's ready to go
off and discover all the quirks and enigmas of the English
language.
Simple, isn't it? Yet, that's the way I've led thousands of
children to learn to read - many of whom had already
given up hope after trying to learn by phonics or the
whole language method.
By the way, I use nonsense words at first, so children will
be using the decoding skills they've learned, rather than
just memorizing whole words.
And I call it "decoding" -- not reading -- because reading
includes comprehension. You can only start focussing on
comprehension once the child can effortlessly make
blended sounds out of the letters on the page.
Finally, it occurred to me, that since this method works
by well-defined, incremental steps, it's a perfect match for
Computer Assisted Learning .
And that's how dEcode™ was born.
Dr. Deborah Chesnie-Cooper
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