Girl with dyslexia starts foundation to help others

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A 10-year-old girl who struggled for years in school is starting a non-profit to help other children like her.

Marin Mangiaracinia was diagnosed with dyslexia, just before the beginning of 4th grade.  Mom Julie knew something was wrong when Marin was struggling to keep up in school.  Julie says it was a struggle just to get her diagnosed.

“After we got nowhere with the school, we decided to have all her testing done and looked at by other specialists in town including the Scottish Rite. Both informed us based on the test scores they saw, she was dyslexic,” Julie said.

“It made me feel sad and I thought I was dumb,” Marin said, about her struggle to read and do her school work.  “I was scared to read out loud in class.”

After hundreds of dollars worth of testing and weeks of after school sessions at the Scottish Rite, Marin went from the 16th percentile to the 68th percentile in her reading scores.

“We were just jumping up and down,” Julie said about receiving Marin’s test scores.

Through her journey, Marin decided she wanted to do more to help kids just like her.  So her mom has launched Marin’s Mission 4 Dyslexia, a non-profit to raise money so children can be tested for dyslexia and so they can receive the special assistance they need.

Read all about it HERE

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Dyslexia Doesn’t Need to Be Permanent

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The answer to overcoming dyslexia requires bridging the gap between scientists and educators, says Dorothy van den Honert, author of the new book, “Wiping Out Dyslexia with Enhanced Lateralization: Musings from my forty years of wiping” (published by AuthorHouse).

In the book, van den Honert outlines her Reading From Scratch program, a new teaching strategy for children with dyslexia. The program, based on years of van den Honert’s research, is designed to get a child up to grade level or better in a year or two of lessons.

“As a teacher for over 11 years, I saw the misery of children suffering from dyslexia first-hand, as the usual teaching techniques failed,” van den Honert says. “Clearly just phonics was not the problem, so I realized that the delivery system had to be faulty.”

The book tells the story of how van den Honert used neurology to form a plan for teaching students with dyslexia to read. She also reflects on the validating experience of passing on the technique firsthand to the students she taught.

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New eBook Released Helps Parents Homeschool a Child with Dyslexia

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Writer and homeschooling mother Kerry Jones, in collaboration with Time4Learning.com, has released a new eBook aimed at parents who are homeschooling a child with dyslexia. “Successfully Homeschooling a Child with Dyslexia” comes from the 12 years of experience Jones had homeschooling her own son with dyslexia.

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A Successful Career Without Credentials

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John “Jack” R. Horner is Regents Professor of Paleontology at Montana State University and the curator of paleontology at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman. He studied geology and paleontology at the University of Montana, Missoula, but undiagnosed dyslexia made it impossible for him to obtain a degree. He went on to become a leader in the fields of dinosaur growth and behavior. As described in his2011 TED talk biography, “Horner discovered the first dinosaur eggs in the Western Hemisphere, the first evidence of dinosaur colonial nesting, the first evidence of parental care among dinosaurs, and the first dinosaur embryos.” Horner has also discovered several new dinosaur species and worked as a scientific consultant for the Jurassic Park movies (also inspiring the movies’ main character) and for TV documentaries. He has two honorary doctorates: one awarded by the University of Montana 1986 and another by the Pennsylvania State University in 2006.

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Housing group offers help to dyslexic residents

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A WINSFORD housing association is offering a helping hand to some of its residents who suffer from dyslexia by supplying free specialist rulers.

Muir Group Housing Association is giving away coloured rulers which people with dyslexia can use when reading.

Jean Broster, service improvement officer at Muir Group, which manages properties in the town, said: “We decided to start giving away the rulers following feedback from a resident.

“We already give away magnifying strips that help the visually impaired.

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