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Why Dyslexia Is A Competitive Advantage In The Age Of AI
Artificial intelligence is extraordinarily good at pattern recognition (registration required) within defined systems. Structured data, repeatable processes, predictable outputs—machines are going to keep getting better at all of it. But AI cannot do what many people with dyslexia do naturally: connect dots across unrelated domains, question the assumption everyone else walked past, think visually instead of linearly.
Those aren’t soft skills. As machines take over execution, human value shifts toward imagination—and that’s where dyslexic thinkers have often lived.
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New strategy will help Scotland become more dyslexia friendly
Dyslexia Scotland has launched a new five-year strategy setting out how it aims to create a more dyslexia-friendly Scotland.
Following an extensive community profiling exercise, the charity has identified six key priorities it says must be addressed to achieve its vision.
The strategy focuses on tackling long-standing injustices, including delays and costs associated with identifying dyslexia, inequalities in educational attainment, inconsistent or ineffective support and persistent public misconceptions.
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DLD: The under-recognised condition that affects 8% of children
Six-year-old Antoni, born in the UK to Polish parents, speaks only a few English words in class and often looks confused when the teacher gives instructions. He could simply be adjusting to English – or the problem could be developmental language disorder (DLD), a condition that severely impairs a child’s ability to learn, use and understand spoken language.
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Theater Becomes Safehaven for Hattiesburg Student Overcoming Dyslexia
“Theater is a place where I am constantly learning and challenging myself, and that is why I love theater so much,” Duggan explained. “It is my safe place where I can work to become a better person and connect with people from many different backgrounds.”
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Kindergarten cognitive deficits linked to dyslexia risk
Key Takeaways
- Cognitive-linguistic deficits in kindergarten—especially in phonological awareness and letter knowledge—strongly predict early-emerging dyslexia by first grade.
- Specific kindergarten deficits, particularly in letter knowledge, rapid automatized naming, and morphological awareness, remain significant risk factors for late-emerging dyslexia in fourth grade.
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