My plan was to help Diego write his name, than add ours before it,
scan the paper, and use it on the letter.
I confidently sat down with Diego, a marker, and a sheet of paper. Diego was excited and I showed him how to write a D. He drew the line, then started drawing the semi-circle, ending up almost an inch lower than the bottom of his line. I encouraged him to connect the points, which
made our line somewhat less linear, but you still got the idea, so we moved on.
Next, the I. In retrospect maybe I should have taught the simple line I without the top and bottom lines. Personally I've always preferred the more complex version though, so we set to work. Diego’s bottom line was fine, but the top line was more of a squiggle, and definitely not on the top. It probably still would have gotten the job done. But Diego, a perfectionist who could tell it did not look like my example, proceeded to dramatically scribble out everything he had written so far . . . (Holly might have been concealing a little laughter).
Next, the I. In retrospect maybe I should have taught the simple line I without the top and bottom lines. Personally I've always preferred the more complex version though, so we set to work. Diego’s bottom line was fine, but the top line was more of a squiggle, and definitely not on the top. It probably still would have gotten the job done. But Diego, a perfectionist who could tell it did not look like my example, proceeded to dramatically scribble out everything he had written so far . . . (Holly might have been concealing a little laughter).
We took a break, then tried again with a few skittles as
motivation. We tried lower case letters to see if they would go any better.
After a few repeats of the above, we got the below, which seemed like
the best we were going to do, and the quantity of skittles that would have been
required for more attempts risked diabetes.
The next day Holly and I were still working in the
classroom when it was time for Diego’s babysitter to go home. We were not quite ready to pack up yet, so I
brought Diego over and tried to keep him entertained. Diego saw the whiteboard and markers and
suddenly a new idea was sparked. I
pulled a table to the bottom of the board so Diego would have a good platform
to work from, and with the new medium he was quite excited to try again.
It turned out drawing letters a foot and a half tall is a
lot easier than drawing letters two inches tall on a paper. Also at that scale following Daddy’s finger
worked a lot better.
Besides that, when Diego messed up a letter and got frustrated, we had the eraser (which he thought was fun in and of itself).
In fact it was so fun that when he finished writing his name
he decided it should have more colors. So
in a highly risky maneuver he erased the I and the O and re-colored them.
(We took the picture above as insurance). Once finished to his satisfaction, he decided to fly.
(We took the picture above as insurance). Once finished to his satisfaction, he decided to fly.
We sure had fun with it, and Diego has
done quite well recognizing the letters in his name ever since.
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