Book about Dyslexia winners

Dyslexia: News from the web:

So now we have a book about people who had dyslexia and turned out to accomplish great things. As a moral support for the children who suffer day in day out from this disability it is probably ok and to highlight these great people is probably also appropriate. It should however be crystal clear how much suffering goes on as a result of lack of funding for resources for our children to adequately deal with dyslexia in the school system.

In their own words:

In Leaders, Visionaries and Dreamers: Extraordinary People with Dyslexia and Other Learning Disabilities, Paul J. Gerber, Ph.D., the VCU School of Education Ruth Harris Professor of Dyslexia Studies, and Marshall H. Raskind, Ph.D., look at 12 incredible people with LD and dyslexia whose lives are characterized by major accomplishments and contributions that they have made in their respective fields as well as on the contemporary American scene.

Read all about it HERE

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Dyslexia and blinking your eyes

Dyslexia: News from the web:

People with dyslexia seem to have an issue with a bridge connecting two pieces of the brain. It is as if the bridge is damaged and some messages come across late or garbled.

Dr. Condor discovered this through high speed photography of chilldren. When they started to blink, one eyelid started down just a fraction of a second before the other one. When they started to smile, one corner of the mouth started up just a fraction of a second before the other one. When they reached for something, one hand started to move just a fraction of a second before the other. The slow side was always the same, and the delay was the same size for everything.

Since this peculiarity was only present in dyslectic kids, he concluded that their CC’s had to be out of shape somehow. I will always be impressed with the fact that today’s brain scans still show the same-sized time delay that Dr. Condon cleverly found in 1982 with nothing but a low-tech, high-speed camera!

Read all about it HERE

Visit us at DyslexiaHeadlines.com
A service from Math and DyscalculiaServices.com