― Isaac Newton
“You have to make the rules, not follow them”
― Isaac Newton
I was watching a television program last night called 'Science Britannica', which is hosted by Professor Brian Cox. The series introduces British science heroes from the last 350 years and this episode was about Sir Iaaac Newton. Something stuck me when Brian Cox talked about Newton's methods; how he observed aspects of the world, came up with theories to explain them and
then tested them with experiments. Newton was incredibly curious, as all scientists are, and he was fascinated with the workings of nature. He believed nature could be best
understood by observation and experiment. Cox concluded that 'science is about simplifying the complex
world around us, creating controllable and repeatable experiments to test
hypotheses and then transferring understanding to the complex world outside the
laboratory.'
It got me thinking about what I'm doing with Sam and I realised that I am taking a very similar approach. I'm observing the workings of Sam, developing theories about how he learns, and experimenting with strategies to test my theories. Not all my experiments work and not every theory is proven correct, but a good many of them are and that is really exciting. Sam's learning difficulties are complex, but Sam needs simple solutions that will help him learn. Hopefully in time, by working together, Sam and I can create enough simple, but effective strategies that will enable him to achieve his learning potential, cope emotionally and help his teacher when he returns to the classroom.
Today both Sam and I were not 100%, so I tailored our lessons and when he ran out of steam we called it quits.
Then we cut out some small pictures for the next activity. Some pretty nifty cutting there Sam. |
Sam's hands get tired and sore very easily, so I made him stop regularly, stretch his hands and give them a good shake. |
We then read all the letters again, made their sound and said what the picture was, E.g. A says /ah/ for ant. |
Great job Sam. He got a stamp and chose a sticker. |
Then we played a matching game with the short 'a' word and picture cards I had made. Sam's deep in thought here. |
We read the short 'a' story book. Just like the long 'a' activity, I had used words from this book when I made the activity sheet. |
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