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| Orton- Gillingham Language Program |
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The Orton-Gillingham approach to reading instruction was developed in the early 20th century. It is language-based, multisensory, structured, sequential, cumulative, cognitive and flexible.
Orton-Gillingham techniques have been in use since 1930s. These techniques are taught in only a very small number of public school systems today, and then only within special education classes; they are used most often in private one-on-one tutorials. An intensive, sequential phonic-based system teaches the basics of word formation before whole meaning. The method accommodates and utilizes the three learning modalities, or pathways, through which people learn - visual, auditory and kinesthetic.
Orton and Gillingham - Samuel Torrey Orton (1879-1948), a neuropsychiatrist and pathologist, brought together neuroscientific information and principles of remediation. As early as the 1920s, he had extensively studied children with the kind of language processing difficulties now commonly associated with dyslexia and had formulated a set of teaching principles and practices for such children. Anna Gillingham (1878-1963) was an educator and psychologist. Working with Dr. Orton, she trained teachers and compiled and published instructional materials.
Features of the Approach:
Flexible: Orton-Gillingham teaching is diagnostic and prescriptive in nature.
Information obtained from Wikipedia