We added a change of scene today to start work on analogue clocks. That's how Barbara Arrowsmith-Young got started on her own exercises, and from the Principal's pack I received from the Arrowsmith school, the description of the brain function improved by this exercise seems to fit A-One.
From what I have read, Barbara put hands on her clocks and drilled herself to tell the time. Her goal was to improve that part of her brain that understands cause and effect and mathematical relationships.
I'm starting the other way around. I have created pages containing 12 clocks without hands, each with a time underneath represented digitally (A-One knows digital times). The exercise I'm asking A-One to do is to write the hands on the clocks. In time, we can try it the other way round too i.e. having him read the times represented by the hands.
Page 1: 6 x on-the-hour times, followed by 6 x half-hour times
Page 2: 6 x quarter times, followed by 6 three-quarter hour times
Page 3: 6 x (10 or 20) past-the-hour times, followed by 6 x (10 or 20) to-the-hour times
Page 4: 6 x (5 or 25) past-the-hour times, followed by 6 x (5 or 25) to-the-hour times
Page 5: 6 x (any other number) past-the-hour times mixed with 6 x (any other number) to-the-hour times
A-One was fine with the 6 x o'clock (on-the-hour) times. When we got to the first half-hour time, he was stumped.
I drew diagrams of the large hand travelling round the clock once an hour, and the small hand travelling between two 'numbers' each hour. With assistance he was able to draw the first half-hour time, but his comment was 'Even though it's right, it doesn't seem right.'
Mum: Take three deep breaths - oxygen to your brain helps you stay alert.
A-One: I don't need to do that.
Mum: OK. Stand up and shaaaaaaake yourself about.
A-One: No! I don't need to do that.
Nevertheless, he sat up straighter in his chair. That enabled him to declare that he was doing only as many as he was comfortable with!
As we tried a few more, he would refer back to my diagrams, and ask how many pages there were to go. A couple of times he drew the little hand between the wrong two numbers, but insisted it was between the correct two numbers. I used a ruler to show him where he'd drawn his hands in relation to the numbers, and his retort was 'Even though it looks wrong, it's right!'
We got to the end of the second page ...
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