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dimwit wrote:My wife wants to send my son to Kumon. Any FG's have had their children go thru Kumon? Is it good, bad or a waste of time. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
I tend to agree with AK; I think kids need to be inspired to learn.. Going to cram school after school doesn't sound very inspiring to me. And I'm an adult.. Sort of..dimwit wrote:My wife wants to send my son to Kumon. Any FG's have had their children go thru Kumon? Is it good, bad or a waste of time. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
dimwit wrote:I'm not planning to have him study math there. I am specifically interested in having him learn both reading and writing Japanese (Kanji) which I am not qualified to teach him and my wife being a doctor doesn't really have the time to do so.
AssKissinger wrote:Doesn't he get that at public school? Has he had part of his education in the States or something? Is he behind for some reason?
dimwit wrote:AssKissinger wrote:Doesn't he get that at public school? Has he had part of his education in the States or something? Is he behind for some reason?
In simple answers No, No and Yes. He hasn't started Kanji yet at school and is only learning Hiragana at the moment but he has a great deal of difficultly with it, and is certainly behind the other students. I'm worried that he may have some reading problem which the school system is not very good at dealing with.
their development is best served by copious amounts of play time, something they won't get if they begin cramming
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Unpopular Opinions from Charles Eicher
AssKissinger wrote:their development is best served by copious amounts of play time, something they won't get if they begin cramming
I believe that 100%.
dimwit wrote:..He hasn't started Kanji yet at school and is only learning Hiragana at the moment but he has a great deal of difficultly with it, and is certainly behind the other students. I'm worried that he may have some reading problem which the school system is not very good at dealing with.
I devour books at an astonishing rate.
AssKissinger wrote:Charles that was a decent post but it's shit like this...I devour books at an astonishing rate.
The only things you're supposed to brag about are J-pussy and chemical consumption. OK?
Charles wrote:AssKissinger wrote:Charles that was a decent post but it's shit like this...I devour books at an astonishing rate.
The only things you're supposed to brag about are J-pussy and chemical consumption. OK?
Oh put a sock in it. I'm not trying to brag, I'm merely recounting a discussion with my opthalmologist, asserting that I was diagnosed as dyslexic but with special training my reading skills became above average, and that all of that training might not have been necessary if I'd just gotten eyeglasses.
The moral of the story is that many "learning disabilities" are merely misdiagnosed vision or hearing problems, and easily treated. If by recounting how I overcame my own troubles, I can help some poor little kid who is struggling in school, then I guess you'll just have to bear with this insufferably intolerable anecdote.
Skankster wrote:-
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As I said b4... go back to the basics.
Try spending YOUR time with YOUR kid and I promise you that will make a difference. Do at a picnik at the park using large flash cards as your flying a kite or something)
and remember the old saying:
If you cannot get anything done right... Do it yourself!
Charles wrote:Oh put a sock in it. I'm not trying to brag, I'm merely recounting a discussion with my opthalmologist, asserting that I was diagnosed as dyslexic but with special training my reading skills became above average, and that all of that training might not have been necessary if I'd just gotten eyeglasses.
The moral of the story is that many "learning disabilities" are merely misdiagnosed vision or hearing problems, and easily treated. If by recounting how I overcame my own troubles, I can help some poor little kid who is struggling in school, then I guess you'll just have to bear with this insufferably intolerable anecdote.
tatsujin wrote:Charles - is the link currently down? Can't seem to get a connection
Kuang_Grade wrote:I'm not picking a fight, Charles but I'm dyslexic and it affects my life everyday. I've developed approaches to deal with it, and despite coming very close to being labeled mildly retarded due to my poor language skills as child, I've succeed by most standards and have 2 BAs and MA degree under my belt.
While it has become trendy to label US kids as LD, I'd say it is a stretch to suggest most of them just need to be told "hey kid, you just need glasses or a hearing aid". Because that's what they said when I was kid, and in my case, they were dead wrong.
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