Sunday, 8 March 2026

Personal Reflection: Learning to Cook

 


When I was younger, my mum got me a little cookery book called How to Boil an Egg by J Arkless.

It was simple and aimed at beginners — just one person at a time — and it helped me start learning cooking skills safely. Even something as small as boiling an egg felt like an achievement at first.

Having a resource like that gave me confidence to try more things in the kitchen, one step at a time. It reminded me that independence starts with small, achievable steps, and that learning can be fun.


You could also pair this with the “Life Skills Module” or Easy Read activities we’ve been creating. For example, learners could:

  • follow the instructions in the book

  • take photos or draw pictures of each step

  • write the steps in a numbered list

  • reflect on what they learned

This makes the lesson interactive, visual, and confidence-building — just like your own experience with early cookery guidance.


Easy Read Activity: How to Boil an Egg 🥚

Goal: Learn to cook a simple egg safely and independently.


What you need:

  • 1 egg 🥚

  • Bowl 🥣

  • Spoon 🥄

  • Salt and pepper 🧂 (optional)

  • Saucepan or microwave ⏱

  • Water 💧


Step-by-Step Instructions

Step 1 – Prepare the egg

  • Put the egg in a bowl. 🥚

  • Optional: draw a picture of your egg here ⬜


Step 2 – Add water

  • Fill a saucepan with enough water to cover the egg. 💧

  • Optional: draw a picture of the water ⬜


Step 3 – Heat the water

  • Put the saucepan on the stove. 🔥

  • Bring water to a boil. ⏱

  • Optional: draw a picture of the saucepan ⬜

Tip: If using a microwave, put the egg in a microwave-safe container with water and cook carefully with supervision.


Step 4 – Cook the egg

  • Boil for about 7–10 minutes for a hard egg. ⏱

  • Optional: draw a timer or clock ⬜


Step 5 – Cool the egg

  • Take the egg out carefully. 🥄

  • Put it in cold water to cool down. ❄️

  • Optional: draw a picture of the cooled egg ⬜


Step 6 – Peel and eat

  • Crack the shell and peel it. 🥚

  • Add salt and pepper if you want. 🧂

  • Enjoy your egg! 😋

  • Optional: draw a picture of your cooked egg ⬜


Questions to Think About

  1. What did you do first?

  2. How did you know the egg was ready?

  3. What step helped you stay safe?


Tips for Teachers / Support Staff

  • Encourage learners to follow the steps one at a time.

  • Let learners draw pictures or paste images for each step.

  • Supervise safely when using hot water or a microwave.

  • Use this activity to teach confidence and independence.



Module: Preparing for Adult Life

 


Introduction

As young people move toward adulthood, learning life skills becomes very important. These skills help people live independently, stay safe, and feel confident in everyday situations.

Life skills are just as important as academic learning. They prepare learners for the big wide world outside school or college.

Learning these skills step by step can help people feel more prepared and less anxious about independent living.


Section 1: Following Instructions

Many everyday tasks involve following instructions in the correct order.

Using numbers helps learners understand what to do:

1️⃣ First
2️⃣ Next
3️⃣ Then
4️⃣ Finally

Example:

Making scrambled eggs

  1. Crack the egg into a bowl

  2. Add a little milk

  3. Mix it together

  4. Add salt and pepper if you want

  5. Cook in the microwave for about 2 minutes

Using numbers makes tasks clearer and easier to follow.

Pictures or symbols can also help learners remember each step.


Section 2: Cooking Simple Meals

Cooking is an important life skill. Learners do not need to start with complicated meals.

Start with simple tasks such as:

  • heating food in the microwave

  • making scrambled eggs

  • making toast

  • making a sandwich

  • heating soup

Teachers or support workers can help learners practice these skills safely.


Section 3: Using Household Appliances

Learners should become familiar with common household appliances such as:

  • microwave

  • kettle

  • toaster

  • washing machine

  • vacuum cleaner

For some learners:

  • digital buttons may be easier

  • others may prefer turning a dial or number

Both are acceptable ways to complete a task.

The goal is to help the learner find the method that works best for them.


Section 4: Kitchen Safety

Safety is an important part of learning independence.

Learners should understand:

  • hot surfaces can burn

  • sharp knives should be handled carefully

  • appliances should be turned off after use

  • food should be cooked properly

Teachers and families can support learners by practising safety routines.


Section 5: Shopping and Money Skills

Another important life skill is learning how to buy things.

Learners can practise:

  • making a shopping list

  • recognising prices

  • paying for items

  • checking change

  • budgeting money

These skills help people become more independent in everyday life.


Section 6: Building Confidence

Many learners feel nervous about doing new things.

Learning life skills helps people:

  • gain confidence

  • feel more independent

  • prepare for work and adult life

Small achievements can make a big difference.


Easy Read Summary

Life skills help people live more independently.

These skills include:

  • cooking

  • following instructions

  • using appliances

  • shopping

  • staying safe

Learning step by step helps people feel confident and prepared for adult life.



Teaching Life Skills for Independence

 


As learners move toward adulthood, it is important that education also includes practical living skills. These skills help people prepare for everyday life, work, and independent living.

Examples include:

  • following instructions

  • cooking simple meals

  • using household appliances

  • managing time

  • shopping

  • understanding safety

Many learners benefit from clear, step-by-step instructions.


Using Step Numbers (1–2–3 Method)

Breaking tasks into numbered steps makes instructions easier to follow.

Learners can focus on one step at a time rather than remembering everything at once.

Example structure:

  1. First

  2. Next

  3. Then

  4. Finally

This technique is widely used in life skills training and vocational education.


Example: Making Scrambled Eggs

Step 1
Crack the egg into a bowl.

🥚

Step 2
Add a small amount of milk.

🥛

Step 3
Mix the egg and milk together.

🥄

Step 4
Add salt and pepper if you want.

🧂

Step 5
Put the bowl in the microwave.

Step 6
Cook for about 2 minutes.


Supporting Different Learning Needs

Some learners may prefer digital instructions, while others may find physical controls easier.

For example:

Microwave use:

  • some learners use the digital timer

  • others may prefer turning the number dial

Both are valid ways of completing the task.

The goal is to help the learner find the method that works best for them.


Using Pictures with Instructions

Adding pictures or symbols can make instructions clearer.

Example:

1️⃣ Crack the egg 🥚
2️⃣ Add milk 🥛
3️⃣ Mix 🥄
4️⃣ Add salt and pepper 🧂
5️⃣ Microwave for 2 minutes ⏱

Pictures help learners:

  • remember steps

  • understand instructions quickly

  • follow tasks independently


Why Life Skills Matter

Learning these everyday skills helps people:

  • become more independent

  • feel confident in daily life

  • prepare for work or further education

  • manage their own routines

Small skills—like cooking a meal or heating food—can make a big difference to independence.


Key Message for Educators

Education should not only focus on academic learning.

It should also prepare learners for the real world, including:

  • daily living

  • self-care

  • problem solving

  • independence

Teaching practical life skills gives learners the tools they need to live more independently and confidently.


When you come back later tonight, we could also build something that would fit perfectly with this idea:

The Picture–List Writing Technique

 


A dyslexia-friendly writing strategy

This technique helps learners break sentences into small visual steps. Instead of writing a long sentence straight away, the learner builds the idea piece by piece.

This improves:

  • comprehension

  • memory

  • sentence structure

  • confidence in writing


Example: Traditional Sentence

The boy went up to the counter and ordered a hamburger, fries, and a coke.

For some learners, this sentence contains too much information at once.


Step-by-Step Writing Method

Step 1 – Identify the main character

Name: John

✏ Write the name
🖼 Add a picture (or drawing) of the boy


Step 2 – Identify the action

John went to the counter

🖼 Add a picture of a counter or shop


Step 3 – List the items

Write the items as a list instead of one long sentence

John ordered:

🍔 Hamburger
🍟 Fries
🥤 Coke

Learners can:

  • draw the items

  • paste pictures

  • use icons


Final Structured Version

John

🧍 (picture of a boy)

John went to the counter.

John ordered:

  • 🍔 Hamburger

  • 🍟 Fries

  • 🥤 Coke

Why This Works

This method helps learners:

✔ organise information
✔ process ideas step by step
✔ reduce reading overload
✔ build sentences gradually
✔ use visual memory

Many dyslexic learners think visually, so pictures help connect ideas.


Teacher Support Strategy

Teachers or support staff can guide the learner through the steps.

  1. Identify the person or subject

  2. Identify the action

  3. Identify the key items

  4. Turn the items into a list

  5. Add pictures or symbols

Once the learner understands the idea, they can later combine the information into a full sentence if needed.


Example Progression

Stage 1 – Visual list

John
🍔 Hamburger
🍟 Fries
🥤 Coke


Stage 2 – Short sentences

John went to the counter.

John ordered food.

He ordered:

  • Hamburger

  • Fries

  • Coke


Stage 3 – Full sentence

John went to the counter and ordered a hamburger, fries, and a Coke.


Key Message for Teachers

Breaking information into lists does not make learning harder.

It is a learning bridge that helps students:

  • understand information

  • organise their thinking

  • develop writing skills gradually

Once learners gain confidence, they can move to more complex writing.

Teaching Techniques to Support Learners with Dyslexia

 


1. Use Short Reading Texts

Long blocks of text can be difficult for many dyslexic learners.

Instead, teachers can:

  • Use short passages

  • Present small amounts of information at a time

  • Break lessons into clear sections

Example:

Topic: Weather

Weather is the condition of the air outside.
It can change from day to day.

Types of weather include:

  • Sunny

  • Rainy

  • Windy

  • Snowy

Questions:

  1. What is weather?

  2. Name two types of weather.

Short texts help learners:

  • focus better

  • understand information more easily

  • build confidence


2. Ask a Few Simple Questions

After a short reading section, include 2–3 questions.

This helps check comprehension without overwhelming the learner.

Example questions:

  • What is the main idea?

  • Can you name one example?

  • How would you explain this to someone else?

Too many questions can create stress and cognitive overload.


3. Use Headings for Each Paragraph

Encourage learners to organise writing using clear headings.

Example:

Weather

Weather changes every day. Some days are sunny and warm.

Rain

Rain happens when water falls from clouds.

Wind

Wind is moving air.

Headings help learners:

  • organise their thoughts

  • structure their writing

  • understand topics more clearly


4. Encourage Visual Learning

Modern classrooms use computers and digital tools. These can help dyslexic learners.

Encourage students to include:

  • pictures

  • diagrams

  • symbols

  • charts

  • mind maps

Example:

Topic: Weather

Learners could add:

  • a picture of the sun

  • a rain cloud symbol

  • a wind diagram

Visual supports improve memory and comprehension.


5. Use Dyslexia-Friendly Font Sizes

Text that is too small can make reading harder.

Recommended settings:

  • Font size: 14–16

  • Font type: Arial, Verdana, or Calibri

  • Line spacing: 1.5

  • Left-aligned text

Avoid:

  • decorative fonts

  • long dense paragraphs

  • italic text

These adjustments make reading less visually stressful.


6. Use Technology as a Support Tool

Computers and tablets are now common in schools and colleges.

Helpful tools include:

  • spell checkers

  • text-to-speech software

  • speech-to-text dictation

  • mind mapping tools

  • grammar support programs

Technology allows learners to focus on ideas rather than struggling with spelling or handwriting.


Key Message for Teachers

Supporting dyslexic learners is not about lowering expectations.

It is about:

  • presenting information clearly

  • removing unnecessary barriers

  • helping learners show their true ability

Small changes in teaching can make a very big difference.



1. Teacher Guidance Text (Book / Training Manual Version)

 


Supporting Learners with Dyslexia: Practical Teaching Techniques

Many learners with dyslexia understand ideas well but may struggle when information is presented in large blocks of text or complex language. Teachers and professionals can support comprehension and confidence by presenting information in clear, structured ways.

Use Short Reading Texts

Large amounts of text can overwhelm learners. Instead, teachers should provide short sections of information.

For example:

Topic: Weather

Weather is the condition of the air outside.
Weather can change every day.

Some types of weather include:

  • Sunny

  • Rainy

  • Windy

  • Snowy

Breaking information into small sections helps learners focus, process information, and remember key points.


Use a Small Number of Questions

After a short text, include two or three simple questions to check understanding.

Example:

  1. What is weather?

  2. Name two types of weather.

Too many questions can make learners feel overwhelmed.

Short question sets help teachers check comprehension while keeping the activity manageable.


Encourage Clear Writing Structure

Learners should be encouraged to organise writing with headings and short paragraphs.

Example:

Weather

Weather changes every day.

Rain

Rain happens when water falls from clouds.

Wind

Wind is moving air.

Using headings helps learners:

  • organise ideas

  • structure their writing

  • make information easier to read


Encourage Visual Learning

Many learners understand information better when words are combined with images.

Teachers can encourage students to include:

  • pictures

  • diagrams

  • symbols

  • charts

  • mind maps

For example, a weather topic might include:

☀ Sun
🌧 Rain
💨 Wind

Visual information helps improve memory and comprehension.


Use Dyslexia-Friendly Text Formatting

Presentation makes a big difference to readability.

Recommended formatting:

  • Font size 14–16

  • Clear fonts such as Arial, Verdana, or Calibri

  • Left-aligned text

  • 1.5 line spacing

  • Clear headings

Avoid:

  • decorative fonts

  • long dense paragraphs

  • too many colours

  • italic text


Use Technology to Support Writing

Computers and digital tools can support learners by reducing barriers to writing.

Helpful tools include:

  • spell checking

  • text-to-speech software

  • speech-to-text dictation

  • mind mapping software

  • grammar support tools

Technology allows learners to focus on ideas rather than struggling with spelling or handwriting.


2. Easy Read Version

Helping Dyslexic Learners

Some people with dyslexia find reading large blocks of text difficult.

Teachers can help by making information clear and simple.


Use Short Text

Write small amounts of information.

Example:

Weather

Weather is what the air outside is like.

Weather can be:

☀ Sunny
🌧 Rainy
💨 Windy
❄ Snowy


Ask a Few Questions

Ask 2 or 3 questions only.

Example:

  1. What is weather?

  2. Name one type of weather.

This helps learners understand the information.


Use Headings

Use headings to organise writing.

Example:

Rain

Rain falls from clouds.

Wind

Wind is moving air.

Headings make writing clearer and easier to read.


Use Pictures

Pictures can help people understand information.

Examples:

  • pictures

  • diagrams

  • symbols

  • charts

Pictures help people remember information.


Use Clear Text

Good text style helps people read.

Use:

  • font size 14–16

  • clear fonts like Arial

  • space between lines

Avoid very small writing.


Use Technology

Computers can help learners write.

Helpful tools include:

  • spell check

  • speech to text

  • text reading software

Technology can make learning easier and less stressful.


3. Dyslexia-Friendly Teaching Checklist

Teachers can use this checklist when preparing lessons.

Lesson Content

✓ Use short reading passages
✓ Present small amounts of information
✓ Break content into clear sections


Questions

✓ Ask 2–3 questions per section
✓ Focus on key understanding


Layout

✓ Use clear headings
✓ Use short paragraphs
✓ Avoid large blocks of text


Visual Support

✓ Add pictures or diagrams
✓ Use symbols or icons
✓ Encourage mind maps


Text Formatting

✓ Font size 14–16
✓ Clear fonts (Arial, Calibri, Verdana)
✓ Good spacing between lines


Technology Support

✓ Allow spell check
✓ Allow speech-to-text tools
✓ Encourage digital writing tools


4. Classroom Poster (Quick Guide for Teachers)

Dyslexia-Friendly Teaching

Make learning easier for everyone

✔ Use short texts
✔ Use headings
✔ Ask a few simple questions
✔ Add pictures or diagrams
✔ Use font size 14–16
✔ Break information into steps
✔ Allow technology support

Small changes can make a big difference for learners.

Teaching Professionals How to Communicate with People with Dyslexia

 


Why This Matters

People with dyslexia are intelligent and capable, but written communication can sometimes be harder to process.

When information is presented in complicated ways, it can lead to:

  • confusion

  • stress

  • misunderstanding

  • loss of confidence

Accessible communication helps people:

  • understand information

  • make decisions

  • feel respected and included

This is why clear communication benefits everyone, not just people with dyslexia.


Technique 1: Use Plain Language

Avoid complicated wording when simple words will work.

Instead of:
“The documentation must be submitted prior to the commencement of the programme.”

Say:
“Please send the forms before the course starts.”

Tips:

  • Use short sentences

  • Use everyday words

  • Avoid jargon where possible


Technique 2: Break Information into Steps

Large blocks of text can be difficult to process.

Instead of one long paragraph, use:

  1. Short paragraphs

  2. Bullet points

  3. Step-by-step instructions

Example:

To apply:

  1. Fill in the form

  2. Attach your documents

  3. Send the form by email


Technique 3: Use Easy Read Where Appropriate

Easy Read uses:

  • simple language

  • short sentences

  • pictures or symbols

  • clear layout

Easy Read helps people with:

  • dyslexia

  • learning disabilities

  • autism

  • ADHD

  • low literacy

  • people learning English

Example:

Heading: Apply for Support

📄 Fill in the form
📎 Add your documents
📧 Email the form to us


Technique 4: Use Dyslexia-Friendly Formatting

Presentation matters.

Helpful formatting includes:

  • Large clear font (such as Arial or Verdana)

  • Font size 12–14 or larger

  • Good spacing between lines

  • Left-aligned text

  • Avoid italics and underlining

  • Use headings to organise information

Avoid:

  • dense paragraphs

  • decorative fonts

  • too many colours


Technique 5: Use Multiple Ways to Share Information

Not everyone learns best by reading.

Professionals can also provide:

  • verbal explanations

  • visual diagrams

  • short videos

  • audio instructions

  • step-by-step demonstrations

This approach supports different learning styles.


Technique 6: Encourage Questions

Sometimes people hesitate to ask questions.

Professionals should say things like:

  • “Please ask if anything is unclear.”

  • “I’m happy to explain this again.”

  • “Let me know if another format would help.”

This helps people feel safe and respected.


Technique 7: Check Understanding

Instead of asking:

“Do you understand?”

Try:

“Would you like me to go over that again?”
or
“Can we check the next step together?”

This removes pressure and encourages communication.


Key Message for Professionals

Accessible communication is not lowering standards.

It is about:

  • removing barriers

  • improving understanding

  • treating people fairly

  • helping everyone succeed

Clear communication benefits all readers, not just people with dyslexia.

Personal Reflection: Learning to Cook

  When I was younger, my mum got me a little cookery book called How to Boil an Egg by J Arkless. It was simple and aimed at beginners — ju...