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Please take a look at some of my books:

The Everything Diabetes Cookbook

Learn more information on CookingWithPam.com in the Diabetes and My Books sections.

The Everything Low-Salt Cookbook
by Pamela Rice Hahn

Click here to see the table of contents for this book and some sample recipes.

The Everything Writing Well Book
by Pamela Rice Hahn

Everything Writing Well Book Resource


The Pocket Idiot's Guide to Acing the SAT Essay
by Pamela Rice Hahn


The Only Writing Guide You'll Ever Need
by Pamela Rice Hahn


The companion Web site for that book is at:
GenealogyTips


Special thanks goes to
the late RJ Corradino for his help with this site.


We Are Not Alone: Learning to Live with Chronic Illness

by Sefra Kobrin Pitzele


A Delicate Balance: Living Successfully with Chronic Illness

by Susan Milstrey Wells

 

Recovering Cognitive Skills Lost to Chronic Illness

Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Fibromyalgia, and other chronic conditions sometimes can cause a loss of cognitive skills so great that the victim needs to relearn how to concentrate. This article's suggestions on how listening for the repeated, familiar sound patterns of rhymes helps increase a child's attention span will work for the adult impaired because of Chronic Fatigue Syndrome or Fibromyalgia as well.

An Easy Way to Increase a Child's Attention Span

When you teach a child how to increase his or her attention span, you do that child a big favor. Learning becomes easier. It can also be fun -- especially when you're doing the teaching in a way in which the child doesn't even realize it's happening!

Rhyme Time
(An excerpt from Alpha Teach Yourself Grammar and Style in 24 Hours)
by Pamela Rice Hahn and Dennis E. Hensley, Ph.D.
Copyright © 2000 Pamela Rice Hahn

Rhyme
Rhyme is a series of word endings that repeats the same, or similar, sounds.

Old Mother Hubbard went to her cupboard....

Rhymes can be used to add a whimsical, yet effective, touch to ad copy:

e.g.
You can always trust our milk, so buy some now.
The only stuff fresher is still in the cow.

If you'd enjoy playing a word game designed to increase attention spans and improve the vocabulary in young children, take a look at Task: Rhyme Time from page 14 of Alpha Teach Yourself Grammar and Style in 24 Hours:

Task: Rhyme Time
Rhymes increase a child's attention span because the child soon learns to listen for the repeated, familiar sound patterns. You can use this to your advantage if you have a youngster in the car with you during a long trip.

Example:
Through the fog, the little green frog in a soggy wet bog jumped from log to log before the dog could hog all the grog.

Play a game to see how many rhyming words you can use in a sentence. This stuff is allowed to be fun, too. (Don't forget to let the kid win!)

End note:

One of the sentences that survives from when I'd play that game with my daughter is: Please don't tease the fleas on my knees, you'll make them sneeze and wheeze; just give them a cuddle, and give them a squeeze, and feed them some cheese.

I recited that sentence to my granddaughter shortly after she'd celebrated her fifth birthday. She listened to me say the sentence and remained silent for a minute, then said, “You left out trees.” So, we modified the sentence to: Please don't tease the fleas on my knees, the breeze from the trees makes them sneeze and wheeze; just give them a cuddle, and give them a squeeze, and feed them some cheese.

Reprinted by permission:
Copyright © 2000 Pamela Rice Hahn
All Rights Reserved
 

For more fun with rhymes, check out the read-aloud story The Ball That Started It All in The Blue Rose Bouquet.

Wonderful Read-Aloud Books by Shel Silverstein:

   

Copyright © 2005 Pamela Rice Hahn
All Rights Reserved

 


Copyright © 1999-2006 by Pamela Rice Hahn. All Rights Reserved.


The purpose of this Web site is to provide a service for the public benefit -- that service being an organized, easy-to-use and -navigate medical reference site. This information is not intended to be an explicit directive of medical or professional health care. Entering this site is acknowledgement that the information contained herein in this service is not legally intended nor implied as a substitute for professional medical advice. Opinions stated on this site are just that: opinions and not advice. One such opinion is that knowledge can be power; it depends on how you use it. Educate yourself and then use such information to help you make better, more informed decisions, as you work with your medical professional in reaching those decisions best for your health. For additional information, see the terms of use.


Page updated 03 October 2005