I think the issues brought up by this discussion are quite valid and kids with 
this type of learning profile frequently go "unnoticed" until they reach the 
secondary grades when efficiency counts just as much as the skills themselves. 
I am concerned by the thought that so long as a kid can comprehend at grade 
level, our job is done as there is no problem. Working in a high school, I run 
into at least a kid or two every year that fits a profile similar to this and 
has seemed to slip through the cracks. Yet, I realize that teachers in the 
lower grades have generally noticed the same weaknesses I see, but do not 
remediate them because of a child's overall academic performance at the time. 
Once these kids get to high school, it is VERY HARD to go back and fill these 
basic skill gaps. They've learned many coping strategies independently, which 
is great. Generally, however, what I find is that these skills are more so 
AVOIDANCE skills rather than coping skills - gathering everything you "need to 
know" about a novel through listening to classroom discussion, not actually 
reading, does not prepare a student for more rigorous reading requirements in 
the common core, in college, and on all those pesky tests, but it does help you 
pass . Their way of "getting by" is certainly more efficient than actually 
learning the skill, yet there's always a point at which it comes back to bite 
them and they need to nail down the skills. Doing so at the high school level 
has to be very much so more individualized than at lower grades because they 
have all found unique ways around skills so one must find unique ways to slide 
in appropriate strategies. Yet, in earlier grades, if these weak skills are 
identified but are not severely impacting a kid's success, I do wonder how we 
provide this preventative support in light of the fact that there are plenty of 
"right now" issues in any given classroom.


Heather Waymouth
High School Literacy Specialist
Honeoye Falls - Lima High School
heather_waymo...@hflcsd.org
(585)-624-7050

"Always show the you in you that makes you who you are." - Chidinma Obietikponah
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