Does Dyslexia also impact movement?

Dyslexia: News from the web:

Dyslexia shows its symptoms also in movements. This is a discovery made by a team of Italian researchers at theUniversity of Milan Bicocca and published in Human Movement Science. According to experts, that have analyzed the handwriting of a group of children with learning disabilities, the duration in writing every single letter of a word is not constant. It varies according to the dimension and speediness of written speech.

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Dyslexia and 3D printing

Dyslexia: News from the web:

Due to the difficulty with standard learning skills like reading and writing, those with dyslexia must learn to harness their creativity in other ways. While it isn’t easy to completely shy away from these skills, working with technology like 3D printers helps dyslexics mimic similar thought processes. For example, 3D printing allows a creative individual to develop an original work, just as a writer might. Then he or she can review, edit and rework it until the desired outcome is me, similar to the editorial process for a written work. It allows those with dyslexia to experience creating a concept and revising it until the end goal is met, a thought process which often enables further innovation and creativity.

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A book for children with dyslexia from a child with dyslexia

Dyslexia: News from the web:

Zivia Avelin, of Mt. Airy, is only 11 years old, but she has already helped illustrate and write “Spell Shaper,” a book designed to help kids with dyslexia or other kinds of reading disabilities. Sarah Aghajanian, of Fairmount, wrote the book with Avelin’s assistance.

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3D printing and Dyslexia

Dyslexia: News from the web:

Read the story from someone with Dyslexia who discovers how well they can work with 3D printing.

3D printing lets those with dyslexia reveal talents to themselves that are otherwise concealed, opening their interest into STEM in ways that textbooks and complex formulas cannot.

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