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Parent site with missteps
Sandy L. Cook hosts a Web site aimed at helping parents understand and “circumvent” their children’s disabilities. She has a lot about home schooling, dyslexia, and such. In addition to her professional qualifications (mostly in technology), she has waded into education for students with Learning Disabilities, having been led there by her children.
The Web site is extensive and (for those who are squeamish about such) features advertisements. I’ve not explored the entire site, but I noted that Ms. Cook has some sensible recommendations (e.g., Teach Your Child to Read in 100 Easy Lessons) and a lot about Orton-Gillingham methods. There are, sadly, perpetuations of some misunderstandings; in particular, I spotted recommendations about identifying learners’ preferred modality for learning, the reversals myth, and scotopic sensitivity (see “Dyslexia Symptoms” and “Remediation 1″).
It’s too bad that there is bad material mixed into the good material on this site. I hope that people discriminate between the wheat and the chaff here, and that Ms. Cook does the research and revision that is needed to make her site more useful and less misleading to parents who want to understand their children’s disabilities.
Link to Ms. Cook’s site.
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