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Phase 2 - Educational Therapy
The Kelter Center
staff uses a wide variety of cutting-edge curriculum materials to explicitly
teach academic skills to children and adolescents.
Spelling and
Reading Single Words
Learning
to read and spell is "rocket science" (Moats, 1999). The critical teaching
elements for these aspects of literacy include learning letters and their
sounds, spelling patterns and rules of phonics, phonemic awareness, and
strategies for developing fluency.
We are
widely known for our expertise in teaching reading and spelling. We use a
wide variety of up-to-date, research-based programs that explicitly teach
these skills. We have used the LiPS™, Seeing Stars™ and Bernard EASE™
programs for many years. Sasha Borenstein has developed a systematic
approach to teaching spelling that is based upon linguistics and makes sense
to students, young and old. Most people think that the spelling of English
is chaotic and impossible to deal with; when we open our students’ eyes to
the principles behind the spelling of English words, they see the beauty and
patterns and get excited about exploring our language in depth. We integrate
the Language!™ Program and its activities and have a library of resources
which help us to design each student’s learning experiences.
Reading Fluency –
Reading Quickly and Accurately
We teach
reading fluency using the Bernard EASE™ Program. This program is unique
because it not only increases a student’s rate of reading, but it also
teaches them to consciously monitor their reading and correct their
mistakes. Another feature of the program is called comprehension monitoring,
being aware of when you are making sense as you read a selection or not, and
how to fix up misunderstandings. The Bernard EASE™ Program also has
activities designed to increase Rapid Naming skills, visual scanning skills,
as well as Phonological Memory Skills.
Reading
Comprehension and Writing Skills
Reading
to understand is not just passing your eyes over the text. At The Kelter
Center we help students develop an awareness of how words form sentences
(syntax and grammar), how words can change their meaning based upon the
context in which they are found, (semantics or vocabulary development) and
we teach them to actively work with a passage, asking questions and finding
the answers, predicting and inferring information to truly understand and
interpret what they have read.
A
journalist or a novelist never sits down and writes an article or novel in
one setting. Brainstorming, organizing, flexibility with syntax and
paragraph formatting are all tools of a mature writer. Editing, elaborating
on ideas, and "rewrites" are all tools of the writing trade.
The
Kelter Center teaches writing by directly investigating and practicing
writing skills and by developing the underlying thinking and organizational
habits needed to become a successful author. We use the Step Up to Writing™
Program, the SIMS™ Sentence Writing Strategies and many other resources to
again, consciously teach our students the steps to writing.
Mathematics
Problem-solving skills, automaticity with number facts and a strong
conceptual mathematics base are essential to academic success in
mathematics. Our teachers approach each of these content requirements with
problem-solving sessions, games and computer programs. We emphasize the
how and why of computing addition through division,
fractions, decimals and percents, as well as basic algebra and geometry.
Mathematical concepts are introduced using concrete manipulatives and
learning experiments to develop conceptual understanding. These discoveries
are then translated to computational skills, which are reinforced using a
variety of programs addressing each student’s individual learning style.
Students will also learn to apply these skills to more complex problem
solving situations.
The Receptive
Learning State
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For any
learning experience to be effective, the educator must carefully and
skillfully design the learning experience, basing activities upon each
child’s unique profile of strengths and weaknesses and educational goals. We
stay focused upon what each student needs. Further, the educator must
consider all aspects of the individual’s social and emotional needs, and
cognitive functioning including speed of processing, memory skills, motor
demands and thinking strategies. Building an environment of trust creates a
foundation of safety to explore any challenging learning experience. We want
to teach our students to become intellectual risk takers, excited explorers
of ideas.
Average
Percentile Rank Increase from Pre- to Post-testing

This data
represents thirty students in elementary school (grades 1st
through 5th) who attended The Kelter Center for an average of
10.6 months from the time of the pre-test to the post-test. Pre-tests
showed that students were an average of 3 months to 3.5 years below their
age expected scores in word identification and spelling. At
post-testing, those same students tested an average of three to five months
ABOVE their age-expectancy scores in word identification and spelling,
showing an average gain of nearly 1.4 years in 10 months of remediation.
Students made an average gain of 1.6 grade levels in reading and 1.4 grade
levels in spelling. The success of remediation relies greatly on the
consistency of the program.
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