How It Works?
If a student was able to instantly recognise the sound of a letter, and all words were one letter long, then reading would be no problem.
If a student was able to instantly recognise the sound of a letter, and then learnt to recognise the sound of two-letter combinations, then reading would be no problem.
And so on for three-letter
combinations and more.
This is what we do - train the student to instantly recognise the sound of the letter, then train them in combined letters, then let them loose on words and sentences.
This may seem like Synthetic Phonics, a system now decreed as mandatory by the British Government.
But what we have done is come up with a method for teaching the first step in a revolutionary new way by the use of memory assocations embedded in animated movies, and reinforcing the learning with video gaming techniques.
In our program, the student does not have to TRY to memorize anything, rather he/she simply watches and plays and the memorizing looks after itself.
Here is an example. Imagine you are an English-speaker trying to remember that the Hindi word for rice is chavel. The chances are you will forget the word very quickly.
Now do the following:
- Take 10 seconds or more and get a picture in your mind of yourself shoveling rice into your mouth.
- Have an imaginary voice in your head make the pun “let’s chavel rice into your mouth”.
You will now remember that rice = chavel for several days or weeks. That’s because you made an association between the sound ‘chavel’ and the unforgettable picture of rice being shoveled into your mouth.
The astonishing thing is that you, the reader, are being subjected to these techniques all the time. They are working on you, and you probably don’t know it. Well, when was the last time you bought anything significant that you HADN’T seen advertised on TV! Most TV advertisements use memory techniques to get you to remember their products.
So we have an astonishing situation where most of the manufactured goods sold in this country are marketed using an extremely successful technique, yet in education, where it could revolutionise the whole education system as we know it, the technique is almost completely ignored.
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