Stories form an integral part of human
society, be it a child or a youth story can be a motivation factor. This art is
a fascinating art and can be used for developmental programmes, depicting joy, sorrow or the bravery of a person.
In ancient times, Vishnusharma, a minister
in a kingdom, wanted to mend the ways of the foolish princes to make them fit
to rule the country. He told them a story each day installing a moral in each. This has been compiled to for the legendary Panchatantra stories.
As special educators and a lover of storytelling,
we here in D.K.’s have been using this form to teach spellings for children
with dyslexia. This has proved to be very effective. We were trying to teach
the spellings of the days of the week to these children. The amount of work put
in teaching the spelling of “Tuesday” proved ineffective and was in vain. Then,
we thought of creating a story for it. It struck immediately and there
came the mind-boggling story:
There was a teashop(T).
and a man who always roamed with an umbrella(U) came to the
shop. He wanted to eat an omelette so he said “oru egg podu pa”(E).
when the shopkeeper cracked the egg there came out a snake(S).
TEASHOP UMBRELLA EGG SNAKE
The same way for Thursday: the same man
went to the Tshop and started sneezing “Hutch Hutch”. The shop keeper said “U R
Stupid”.
TEASHOP HUTCH U R STUPID
The same man went on Saturday and SAT on a
bench in the same shop. The shopkeeper came running and swore “you are……U R……”
SAT UR day
This is a small attempt in teaching through
story telling.
This became a lot more interesting to the
kids and till now these kids as grown-up students recall the same story to
remember the spellings of the days.
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