- Kindergarten teachers can give their students a real “leg up” in learning the early sight words.
- First grade teachers use this method to ensure that all their students learn the basic sight words by the end of the year.
- Second and third grade teachers use it for those students who are reading below grade level.
- ESL teachers find them very effective for their population.
- Struggling readers, students on an IEP, and students with an auditory processing glitch find these cards invaluable for making a “leap” in learning.
-
Sale!This is a unique method of teaching sight words. The left brain hemisphere stores the name of the word, while the right brain hemisphere stores the “picture” of the word. To help the student store the name and picture in one unit, we use the unique, powerful method of Imbedding. This method of learning works wonderfully with students of all ages and abilities:
-
Sale!This is a unique method of teaching sight words. The left brain hemisphere stores the name of the word, while the right brain hemisphere stores the “picture” of the word. To help the student store the name and picture in one unit, we use the unique, powerful method of Imbedding. This method of learning works wonderfully with students of all ages and abilities:
- Kindergarten teachers can give their students a real “leg up” in learning the early sight words.
- First grade teachers use this method to ensure that all their students learn the basic sight words by the end of the year.
- Second and third grade teachers use it for those students who are reading below grade level.
- ESL teachers find them very effective for their population.
- Struggling readers, students on an IEP, and students with an auditory processing glitch find these cards invaluable for making a “leap” in learning.
-
Sale!This is a unique method of teaching sight words. The left brain hemisphere stores the name of the word, while the right brain hemisphere stores the “picture” of the word. To help the student store the name and picture in one unit, we use the unique, powerful method of Imbedding. This method of learning works wonderfully with students of all ages and abilities:
- Kindergarten teachers can give their students a real “leg up” in learning the early sight words.
- First grade teachers use this method to ensure that all their students learn the basic sight words by the end of the year.
- Second and third grade teachers use it for those students who are reading below grade level.
- ESL teachers find them very effective for their population.
- Struggling readers, students on an IEP, and students with an auditory processing glitch find these cards invaluable for making a “leap” in learning.
-
Sale!This is a unique method of teaching sight words. The left brain hemisphere stores the name of the word, while the right brain hemisphere stores the “picture” of the word. To help the student store the name and picture in one unit, we use the unique, powerful method of Imbedding. This method of learning works wonderfully with students of all ages and abilities:
- Kindergarten teachers can give their students a real “leg up” in learning the early sight words.
- First grade teachers use this method to ensure that all their students learn the basic sight words by the end of the year.
- Second and third grade teachers use it for those students who are reading below grade level.
- ESL teachers find them very effective for their population.
- Struggling readers, students on an IEP, and students with an auditory processing glitch find these cards invaluable for making a “leap” in learning.
-
Sale!This is a unique method of teaching sight words. The left brain hemisphere stores the name of the word, while the right brain hemisphere stores the “picture” of the word. To help the student store the name and picture in one unit, we use the unique, powerful method of Imbedding. This method of learning works wonderfully with students of all ages and abilities:
- Kindergarten teachers can give their students a real “leg up” in learning the early sight words.
- First grade teachers use this method to ensure that all their students learn the basic sight words by the end of the year.
- Second and third grade teachers use it for those students who are reading below grade level.
- ESL teachers find them very effective for their population.
- Struggling readers, students on an IEP, and students with an auditory processing glitch find these cards invaluable for making a “leap” in learning.
-
Using the Visual Number Cards, you will teach to your child’s strong visual memory through the dots on the numbers and story on the back of each card. We use this method instead of memorizing addition or subtraction facts. Kids love how fast they get good at doing hard, long computation problems using these zany memory tricks.
-
Parents often wait until the Biology of Behavior supplemental program is completed, to determine if their child needs this supplement.
Many families experience great results for children with rages, temper tantrums, night terrors or nightmares, difficult time getting to sleep, anxieties, or “SI” symptoms. -
These capsules, created by Dr. Jacqueline Stordy, contain all three oils in proper balance: fish oil (DHA), primrose oil (GLA), and vitamin E. The advantage is that the three oils are together in one capsule. This will give your child the DHA their Corpus Callosum (midline of the brain) needs to pass information more easily from the left (learning) side of the brain to the right (automatic memory) side of the brain.
-
Sale!The first Student Reader in the first grade series, “At Bat!” (Level 1-A) was created to teach struggling older readers of any age, or beginning readers up to mid-year first grade level. (1.1 reading level). The “At Bat!” Reader contains the phonetic vowel patterns: –at, -ad, -an, -ap, -am, -ag, -ab and the sight words: is, a, my, he, on, not, in, the, look, Max, and, by, it, I, we, no, see, to, her, his, she.
-
Sale!The second Student Reader in the first grade series, “The Big Win” (Level 1-B) is for the struggling older reader of any age, or beginning readersin the middle of first grade reading level.“The Big Win” Reader contains: Phonetic vowel patterns: –ix, -it, -in, -id, -ig, -im, -ip, -ut, -un, -ub, -ug, -us, -up, -um, -ud Sight words: are, said, with, got, put, you, little, took, of, for, me, do, have, happy, if, be, as, has, from, will, was.
-
Sale!The third Student Reader in the first grade series, “You Rock!” (Level 1-C) is the final Reader in the first grade level. This is for the struggling older reader of any age, or beginning readers at the end of first grade level reading. The “You Rock!” Reader contains the phonetic vowel patterns: –og, -op, -ob, -ot, -ox, -et, -ed, -en, -eg; the double consonants: -ll, -ss; the consonant blends: ck, ch, th, tch and the sight words: yes, mom, good, doctor, went, down, come, play, very, away, help, go, so, they, one, day, here, eat, your, funny, find, make, jump, our.