Dyslexia still a blight for kids, despite treatment advances

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Despite advances in medical treatments for dyslexia over the past five years, not enough is being done to understand the causes of the condition to help kids struggling to read, concludes a seminarpublished online in The Lancet today.

Most children are only diagnosed with dyslexia after they have experienced serious difficulties in school, at a time when it is much harder for them to master new skills, and this could be thwarting their ability to fully realise their potential, say the authors.

“Professionals should not wait until children are formally diagnosed with dyslexia or experience repeated failures before implementation of reading treatment, because remediation is less effective than early intervention”, explain Robin Peterson and Bruce Pennington from the University of Denver in Colorado, USA.

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The dyslexia racket and the alternative

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Shortly after I started teaching in a secondary school, in the early seventies, I had a conversation with an eleven year old who had “bunked off” my English class, and who, I discovered, could not read. No-one had told me about this when I took over the class – a colleague asked me if I didn’t believe in “self-fulfilling prophecies” – and the deputy head told me with equanimity that “lots of boys in the first year can’t read”.

My response was to become a reading teacher, and from that time onward, I’ve been doing all I can to teach reading and other aspects of literacy as effectively as possible so that people will be able to read, with their problems either knocked out or severely cut down. After a few years, a certain amount of success and a couple of articles, I was introduced to an American book written during World War Two, with the educationally unfashionable title Remedial Techniques in Basic School Subjects, whose author, Grace Fernald, had developed simple and effective approaches to serious reading difficulties, including some caused by brain damage. She had done equally good work on basic arithmetic, and her insights into foreign languages coincided with work I’d done with children who had been failing in French (my degree subject).

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It’s Not Sci-Fi: Baboons Can Learn To Recognize Words

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Baboons can recognize scores of written words, distinguishing them from non-words, a feat that raises intriguing questions about how we learn to read, scientists reported. The experiment points to visual-attention shortfalls, rather than problems in the brain with speaking or hearing, as an explanation for dyslexia in children.

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Reading Group marks 40 years of helping kids teach themselves

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These days, it’s not uncommon to hear about dyslexia or other learning disabilities.

But when The Reading Group began its work to help children with dyslexia and other challenges, people tended to think of it as a disease for a doctor to treat, said Marilyn Kay, the organization’s founder and its former executive director.

Research and common knowledge about the subject have come a long way in the last 40 years, she said, and so has The Reading Group.

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Richmond College flies the flags for dyslexia

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Hundreds of little flags were planted at Richmond College last week, as part of an initiative to help students affected by dyslexia.

The flags were planted under direction of artist Jon Adams, a fellow of the Royal Society of the Arts, who is dyslexic himself and explained to students how art helped him tackle his learning disability and involved them in a practical workshop.

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1 in 6 Americans are Dyslexic – Unchanged in 100 Yrs

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The National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, National Adult Literacy Survey, U.S. Department of Education, and The National Institute of Heath; confirm that 1 out of 5 Americans have a reading and writing disability. In which, 70% of those persons have dyslexia.The percentage of dyslexics in America has not changed in spite of educational and psychological advancements in the last 100 years.There are many adults in the world today that still do not know that they’re dyslexic. “What if you learned that you were dyslexic?” “You would write a book of course,” says Richard “Dick” W. Kraemer author of a new book Dyslexic Dick – True Adventures of My World.

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