Take him out behind the barn and beat the **** out of him with a pool stick! Worked for me.
2006-07-30 07:28:32
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answer #1
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answered by rookie 3
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Whoah there.Don't get too ahead of yourself
People who read and write slowly aren't stupid,in need of treatment or something [in most cases]
Anyway he's only in class vii, so lots of time for improvement
Try this.Tell him that you and he'll play a game for a week
First ask him to write a paragraph while seeing what time he took
Let's say he took 10 minutes, tell him if he does the same in nine minutes you'll buy him a gift [something that motivates him, something small value like a chocolate]
Tell him he'll get three chances every day to get it right
Slowly decrease the time every day in increments you deem right,you can use a similar sized paragraph next day
A week and a few chocolates later, he'll be a little faster and maybe it'll become a habit
It has worked with my little cousins.you may have to work something similar every once in a month to keep the momentum going though
Or you could try some other similar challenge that increases his speed and has a tangible reward.Think and be creative
Rather than making him feel he has some BIG fault by taking him to doctor and such [at least initially] try the above
Best of luck
2006-07-30 15:12:41
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answer #2
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answered by Kind_light 2
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Have him write a journal on the things he likes and ask him to do this everyday. After a little time you will see that he starts to get real into it. I have a son that had a problem something like that and journal help, because he began to write so quickly and got so into it.
2006-07-30 14:25:23
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answer #3
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answered by Gerri 1
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Go and get expert help. Don't hesitate. It is important for your son to get him the right help. He could be the best in the class but you will never know unless you get professional help.
This is free in the UK, I hope it is free in the USA as well
2006-07-31 11:00:40
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answer #4
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answered by andyoptic 4
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pull him out of school and get him a job doing hard physical labor for a couple months, my bet is writing will improve real fast
2006-07-30 14:22:52
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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Get him tested for word problems.
Get him a girl tutor, that's his age and very cute.
I had a son who was very slow. (He died at age 28) It takes going that extra mile to get the best results possible.
Good luck.
2006-07-30 14:46:28
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answer #6
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answered by Mary 2
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He should be assessed for learning disabilities. It might not be laziness but lack of ability to learn at the same rate as his peers.
2006-07-30 14:22:28
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answer #7
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answered by LindaLou 7
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try a tutor
2006-07-30 14:22:48
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answer #8
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answered by beach lover 2
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