Ryujin
Legend
Hong Kong Fuey; number 1 super guy?Scatman Crothers was the voice of Hong Kong Fuey.
Hong Kong Fuey; quicker than the human eye?
Hong Kong Fuey; number 1 super guy?Scatman Crothers was the voice of Hong Kong Fuey.
That's pretty stupid. But honestly, this is teenagers since the dawn of time. Were you not one of those once?
He and no other!Hong Kong Fuey; number 1 super guy?
Hong Kong Fuey; quicker than the human eye?
I think you and I have very different ideas on what constitutes a dumb teenager error.A teenager, sure.
But I've never been a dumb teenager - my problem was being too smart for my own good.
(I protested my mother's smoking by blowing up her ashtrays with homemade firecrackers when I was ten...)
He's fanriffic!He and no other!
Sorry for being pedantic, but Krashen's is a theory, not a method. A theory explains and informs teaching, an approach guides teaching, and a method prescribes teaching down to materials activities and regimes.Also TIL there’s a language learning method that’s almost perfectly designed for ADHD language learners. Stephen Krashen‘s comprehensible input theory. Looking forward to trying that out.
TIL that there’s some overlap in ADHD and dyslexia, to the point where fonts designed to help readers with dyslexia can help readers with ADHD. Being a font nerd I looked up what types of fonts generally help and some specific fonts. The most popular fonts designed for dyslexia give me a headache just looking at them, but seeing that monospaced and/or sans serif fonts can help, I loaded Courier Prime onto my eReader to see if it helps. Weirdly, it really does. Though not so much with Courier Prime Sans. Familiarity helps, and I’m incredibly familiar with Courier Prime, though Courier Prime Sans was brand new to me.
Also TIL there’s a language learning method that’s almost perfectly designed for ADHD language learners. Stephen Krashen‘s comprehensible input theory. Looking forward to trying that out.
Yeah. One absolutely massive benefit of eReaders is font choice. I tried reading long text works on a standard backlit screen and that sucked. Once I got an eInk eReader my reading took off. Still slow compared to some because of the ADHD, but I’ll take what I can get.I switch my Kindle device and apps to sans serif fonts a couple years ago and it helped a lot. I’ve also kicked the font size up a little, and that also helps. I can read the next size down, but the larger one is just more comfortable and I can read a lot longer with it, and many fewer eye strain headaches.