cakedashdash wrote:
Any ideas for reading software or sites for 6/7th grader who reads at a 2 or three level
and often skips words and sentence
This worked for my nephew. Get highlighter pens of two different colors. Ask the child to read and highlight consecutive blocks of words in alternating colors. There are no rules for the block boundaries. Just highlight every a few words.
As for myself, I don't really like to read fiction books. I could, when forced to (like when I read the whole book of Don Quixote in classical Spanish in my high school). I need to doodle while I read. I call it "taking picture notes." The "picture notes" should be really really simple, it's more important to have more frames than having elaborate drawings inside each frame. Use single letters or acronyms of very few letters when necessary (to represent objects/people/actions/ideas). I use a lot of arrows, too. Each frame should not have too many strokes, perhaps no more than 20 strokes. It's OK to be very abstract, but speed is the essence: your main task is to read, not to draw. Drawing only helps you to re-focus and revisit immediate previous segments of the story, so that you can make sense out of the story. Very often, after drawing a few frames, I pick up steam in reading, and don't need to doodle anymore, or doodle a new frame only after a few pages.
To give you an idea, here is an example of "picture notes" that my daughter took while reading "The Tiny Seed" story. It's too elaborate, in my opinion. The frames should be even simpler.