Saturday Morning Presentation with Dr Susie Nyman

Top Multi-Sensory Tips and Techniques for Supporting Dyslexic Students

Saturday 9 July 2022 ︱10.00am for 10.30 – 12.00

Farnham Memorial Hall, GU9 7EE

£25

Book here.

This seminar will be a lively interactive practical presentation that will help you inspire children with dyslexia to become grade risers and ultimately achieve stellar results.We are delighted that Dr Susie Nyman is giving our next Saturday presentation on Top Multi-Sensory Tips and Techniques for Supporting Dyslexic Students aimed at parents and education professionals.

Susie will showcase innovative, tried and tested, easy-to-replicate Multi-Sensory Techniques from her Multi-Sensory Toolkit that she uses with her students at The Sixth Form College, Farnborough.

Susie is passionate about discovering how children learn and supporting them in ways which enable them to succeed.

As an international speaker, exam board moderator and CPD trainer, she thoroughly enjoys sharing her knowledge and experiences about Multi-Sensory Teaching.

She has published articles for BBC Bitesize, the BDA and SEN Magazine. Her innovative methods have been published by Oaka Books in her ‘Multi-Sensory Toolkit’ as well as ‘How to Become a Grade Riser’.

Book here.

By |2024-07-23T16:53:37+01:00June 6th, 2022|Archive news|Comments Off on Saturday Morning Presentation with Dr Susie Nyman

Catch-up learning over the summer holidays

We have one-to-one tuitions sessions to offer children in Key Stages 2 to 4 over the summer holidays. Book one session or several to help your child get ahead for the new school year.

All sessions are run by our qualified specialist teachers and will take place at the Helen Arkell Dyslexia Centre in West Street, Farnham, Surrey.

By |2024-07-23T16:53:58+01:00June 6th, 2022|Uncategorized|Comments Off on Catch-up learning over the summer holidays

Catch-up learning over Easter

We have one-to-one tuitions sessions to offer children in Key Stages 2 to 4 over the Easter holidays. Book one session or several to help your child get ahead for the new term.

All sessions are run by our qualified specialist teachers and will take place at the Helen Arkell Dyslexia Centre in Frensham, near Farnham, Surrey.

Find out more here.

By |2024-07-23T16:53:52+01:00May 25th, 2022|Uncategorized|Comments Off on Catch-up learning over Easter

UCL’s Sleep and Dyslexia Research Survey

Our friends from University College London are researching sleep in children with dyslexia.

Do you know dyslexic children who take forever to go to sleep? Or others that zonk out in minutes? Either way, please help us understand more about whether dyslexia impacts sleep!

I am researching the connection between Dyslexia and Sleep at UCL London. Very little is currently known about it. We want to learn more about sleep in dyslexic children and provide ways that might help improve their sleep.

If you care for a dyslexic child aged 7 to 13 in the UK, please fill in the 20-minute survey.

The survey will help us gain a better understanding about how daytime activities can impact sleep and mental health in dyslexic children.The more we learn about it, the better chances we have to develop further ways to help.

Katrin Jeffcock LLM MSc

At the end of the survey, you can apply to participate in an optional second part of the study in which we objectively measure sleep behaviour and cortisol levels of dyslexic children.

By |2024-07-23T16:54:13+01:00May 25th, 2022|Uncategorized|Comments Off on UCL’s Sleep and Dyslexia Research Survey

Helen Arkell Dyslexia Charity students graduate with flying colours

Helen Arkell Dyslexia Charity held a very special graduation ceremony on Wednesday for students of its professional qualifications.

The 41 graduates now hold Level 5 Diplomas in Teaching Learners with Dyslexia/Specific Learning Difficulties or Level 7 Diplomas in Teaching and Assessing Learners with Dyslexia/Specific Learning Difficulties.

Both year-long courses are run from our Centre in Frensham and consist of weekly lectures as well as teaching practice in local primary and secondary schools. The teaching practice demands a level of creativity from the students, and they were congratulated on their inspiring and memorable teaching methods which included a pop-up pirate, funky glasses and dressing up hats!

Graduation certificates were presented by long-time friend of the Charity, Fintan O’Regan, an expert in the world of neurodivergence, and the ceremony was attended by families of the students, course tutors, charity trustees, and members of the Helen Arkell team.

The graduation was all the more special because some of these students had waited over a year to celebrate their graduation with their courses disrupted and their qualifications delayed by the pandemic. These students were delighted to be back at the Centre to hear all the news from the charity about how it has stepped up to support more children and adults with dyslexia than ever.

CEO Andy Cook said, ‘Congratulations to all our graduates. We are so proud of them. Being ‘Helen Arkell trained’ really means something in this field and these graduates are valued ambassadors and members of the Helen Arkell family.’

Find out more about our professional courses.

By |2024-07-23T16:54:06+01:00May 25th, 2022|Uncategorized|Comments Off on Helen Arkell Dyslexia Charity students graduate with flying colours

We’ve moved to Farnham!

As you know, we have been supporting children and adults with dyslexia since 1971, and after 50 years based in Frensham village, we have now moved our Centre to 24 West Street in the heart of Farnham.

This is the beginning of an exciting new era for the charity; our in-person dyslexia services will be more accessible to those who don’t drive, and we will be more visible on busy West Street.

Our CEO Andy Cook says, ‘We are very excited to be moving to Farnham town centre and looking forward to helping even more people with dyslexia. We will be offering all our tried and tested services to individuals with dyslexia, as well as to schools, teachers and workplaces, and will very much enjoy being part of the Farnham community. This is an exciting new chapter for the charity as we embark on the next stage of our mission to remove barriers for people with dyslexia so that they can maximise the positive attributes that dyslexia brings.’

The new Centre is in a lovely Grade 2-listed Georgian house once lived in by the architect Harold Falkner who had a profound influence on the architecture of the town. You will find us between The Wheatsheaf pub and the Adult Education Centre, within walking distance of local bus routes and Farnham railway station.

We’ll be holding an Open Evening at 6pm on Wednesday 29 June, as an opportunity for anyone to pop in and see the charity’s new home. If you would like to come along, simply email events@helenarkell.org.uk to let us know.

By |2024-07-23T16:54:32+01:00May 25th, 2022|Uncategorized|Comments Off on We’ve moved to Farnham!

Revision tips for effective learning

This is the time of year when revision takes priority over many other activities for students whose exams are fast approaching. The key is to study smarter, not harder (or longer). Here we look at a few revision tips.

Get organised

Decide where and when you are going to revise. Pick a quiet space and make sure you have all the equipment and books you need. Some people prefer to study with others around as it can help with discipline but chose a space alone if that would distract you. It’s most helpful if you leave your phone in another room.

Plan your revision

Devise a revision plan working backwards from your exam dates. Use a checklist of each subject’s topics so that you can cross them off and make sure you have covered everything.

When making your plan, be realistic. You won’t benefit from revising for eight straight hours a day or all evening after school or college. Aim for around four sessions of 20 to 30 minutes in an evening and perhaps six to eight if you have all day.

Each session should cover a different topic to keep you fresh. Before you start, have a clear idea of what you are going to study during each session. Plan in breaks – most of five to ten minutes, with longer breaks so that you can do something nice.

Time your sessions

Using the Pomodoro technique can help you stay motivated and focussed. Each 25-minute session is timed using an alarm clock or kitchen timer. It’s 25 minutes because that’s the optimum time to concentrate and not get distracted. Use a couple of minutes at the start of each session to get ready and use the last five minutes to review what you have learnt. Most effective learning happens at the beginning and the end of a session so short sessions mean lots of beginnings and endings! See more about the Pomodoro technique here.

Use a variety of learning techniques

We all have ways of learning that work better for us but using a variety is helpful too. During each short revision session:

  • Before reading, take an overview of the material – by reading titles, the introduction, the beginning and the end of paragraphs and the conclusion. This primes your brain about the topic before you start reading in depth.
  • Revision by just reading, highlighting or copying notes, is not as effective as testing your knowledge.
  • To test yourself you could:

– build a mind map where you do a ‘brain dump’

– use cue cards to answer questions

– explain a concept, using your own words, to someone else.

  • If you write, draw, use colour, speak out loud and use gestures, the information is made more memorable and more easily retrievable. Rather like routes to a destination, the more roads there are, and the more times they are driven, the easier it is to get there.

Regular testing sticks – the Leitner system

The Leitner system is an efficient way to test yourself using cue cards, monitor your progress and focus on what you find tricky. Cue cards are reviewed at intervals and this repetition is both effective and rewarding. Written down, the system seems quite fiddly so it is worth watching a video on the system. This one is easy to follow.

Look after yourself

Most important, when you are preparing for exams, is to look after yourself. Take time to:

  • Sleep for long enough each day.
  • Eat well.
  • Drink lots of water. Your brain is 75-80 per cent water. Being even slightly dehydrated affects its function!
  • Take exercise and get out of the house.
  • See friends and have fun.

Good luck!

Twinkl logo educational resourcesThis post was featured by Twinkl in their Exams and Revision Blog

By |2024-05-17T10:45:14+01:00May 8th, 2022|Team blog|Comments Off on Revision tips for effective learning

Making home learning fun

Note: This article was originally written for use during the Covid lockdowns.

As parents, we sometimes struggle to keep our children entertained in normal circumstances. During the current situation, it can be even more challenging thinking of ways to keep them amused and having to manage this together with school and work commitments can be difficult.

So here are a few suggestions to keep your children both entertained and learning – while having a bit of fun!

Write a postcard to a friend or relative about something they have done, read, watched or baked.

Play a board game like ‘Guess Who’ or ‘Connect 4’ which can support logical and reasoning skills. On a wet day, dust off the Monopoly and see who gets Park Lane!

Keep a diary or get creative using a scrapbook; record events, write, draw and collect items that can be glued in such as pictures from magazines, photos or wrappers.

Take a virtual tour of a gallery, museum or zoo. From the Museum of Modern Art in New York to our very own Natural History Museum there are some great virtual tours for children.

Save up your cardboard and build a play town, farm or shopping centre.

Get creative through painting, drawing, photography, crafting, knitting, sewing, cooking or baking. Expression through creativity can really help with wellbeing.

Make the most of the great outdoors – it’s free! Combine your daily exercise with a mini beast hunt identifying insects or set up a treasure hunt (while safely social distancing).

Do some modelling – not the cat-walk kind; use clay, plastercine/playdough or even cake icing paste to make models of all kinds of items and people, from cars to the dog or granny.

Plant some seeds – beans, lettuce – even try an apple pip. See how they grow – you might have something tasty to eat later in the year.

Play bingo – you could use numbers or you could use items, colours, letters or names.

Make a family tree – talk to your grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins and make a chart of how they are related. You could add dates of birth, pictures etc. Find out about your grandparents’ parents too, if you can.

At the Helen Arkell Dyslexia Charity, we specialise in providing expert support to dyslexic children and their families. We offer 1:1 personalised tuition sessions tailored to your child’s needs. This can include anything from basic literacy skills and improving general organisation to revision techniques. To find out more email enquiries@helenarkell.org.uk.

By |2024-04-24T09:36:16+01:00December 8th, 2021|Team blog|Comments Off on Making home learning fun

Tips for testing in the classroom by Bernadette McLean

Pearson Clinical Assessment has published the following article written by Bernadette McLean on their website:

Tips for Testing in the Classroom

by Bernadette McLean – former Principal of Helen Arkell Dyslexia Centre

More and more teachers and teaching assistants are being required to use testing in the classroom. This can be a daunting task if they have not had training or previous experience. Standardised test manuals can be scary and the language unfamiliar particularly with regard to scoring and administration.

Tests are very useful for measuring progress and providing you with feedback on the success of teaching.

The following are some tips on assessing and a guide to potential pitfalls.

  1. Consider carefully the need and reasons for testing, and whether the proposed test serves the need. Ensure that the test actually tests what it claims to. A test that gives you a reading age is a reading age for that kind of reading e.g. single word/ sentence /passage and should not be compared over time with another kind of reading test. Test only if necessary and if the appropriate test is available.
  2. When possible arrange optimum conditions of time and place.
  3. Study and practise test instructions.  You should be familiar with the test manual and you should have checked the instructions, timing, when the test should end, how the responses are recorded.  Double-check necessary materials, such as stopwatch, paper, score sheets, etc. Even if you have administered a test many times, it’s a good idea to read the manual regularly, so not to forget particular points of administration. This is very important if you are using tests scores as they have been worked out on numbers of pupils all using the exact instructions in the manual.
  4. Put your learner/s at ease and encourage best efforts.  Explain what the test requires, if appropriate.  Explain in advance that you may not be able to help or indicate if answers are right or wrong.  You may wish to offer to discuss performance at the end of testing.
  5. Follow instructions exactly, maintaining an impartial attitude.  Encourage but do not over praise; respond similarly to correct and incorrect answers.  Do not coach or give non-verbal cues such as looking at the correct answer.
  6. Keep as full a record of responses as practicable if you are testing children individually (how the child arrived at his answer, if he was slow, any comments made, and any self-corrections).
  7. Double-check the scoring; check that raw scores are correctly converted into standard scores. Make sure the child’s/children’s name/s and date are on all of the test material for future reference.
  8. Consider the results critically and remember that any score simply tells you the minimum that your pupil/s could achieve, on one particular day.
  9. Do not repeat the test too soon. Check the manual for information.

See our CPD and Specialist Assessor Training Courses here.

© Bernadette McLean, Helen Arkell Dyslexia Charity

By |2024-04-24T09:36:18+01:00May 8th, 2021|Team blog|Comments Off on Tips for testing in the classroom by Bernadette McLean

Reasons to be cheerful podcast – listen to CEO Andy and co discuss dyslexia

Brain Power: Disentangling the narratives around dyslexia

Reasons to be Cheerful with Ed Miliband and Geoff Lloyd

If you have the opportunity, please take the time to listen to the Reasons to be Cheerful latest podcast on dyslexia and dyscalculia and how we need to improve recognition in society and understand the contribution people with neurodiversity can make.

The podcast is hosted by Former Labour Party leader Ed Miliband, and Sony Award-winning radio host Geoff Lloyd and, as well as Andy, features Kate Griggs from Made by Dyslexia and Rob Jennings from the Dyscalculia Network.

Find out more and listen here.

By |2024-07-23T16:54:39+01:00August 6th, 2020|Uncategorized|Comments Off on Reasons to be cheerful podcast – listen to CEO Andy and co discuss dyslexia
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