How to try ‘immersive reading’

Until recently I believed that the three greatest contributions audiobooks have made to civilization were providing access to books to the sight-impaired, reducing the tedium of mindless drudgery and providing another level of interpretation and richness through the voices of gifted narrators. Further, audiobooks can add a new dimension to reading. Many people listen to a book while reading it at the same time, a practice known as “immersive reading.” The term began to take off in the late 1990s, rising steeply in the new century, which was, as it happens, when audiobooks began their own momentous ascent.

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Dyslexic Thinking: Invisible In Class, Powerful In The Boardroom

An estimated 900,000 children in England have dyslexia, according to new research, yet fewer than 2% of local authorities track how many they support. That’s 900,000 dyslexic thinking kids being left to navigate a system that often labels difference as deficiency; kids who could represent the next generation of innovators and business leaders. Studies show that around one in three (20% to 40%) entrepreneurs are dyslexic thinkers, underlining that these early classroom challenges often nurture the exact skills needed to lead, innovate, and take risks.

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Font-Converters.com Launches Comprehensive Font Toolkit

Font-Converters.com today announces the full launch of its comprehensive font toolkit, providing professionals and hobbyists with a completely free, privacy-focused solution for font conversion and manipulation. The platform combines universal font conversion between 8 formats with specialized tools, including a dyslexia-friendly font converter, drop shadow CSS generator, automatic CSS code generator, and advanced font subsetting capabilities.

Get more information HERE

A firefighter with dyslexia is to share his experience of the condition.

The charity Dyslexia Sparks has linked up with Humberside Fire and Rescue to hold an awareness event at Bransholme Fire Station in Hull on Saturday.

Firefighter Sam Heslop said he had bell well supported by his employer, adding: “Your difference can be celebrated and something unique to you. When I joined the fire service it was reinforced that they don’t want people to think exactly the same.”

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Nearly every state in the US has dyslexia laws – but our research shows limited change for struggling readers

Nearly every state in the U.S. passed some sort of dyslexia laws over the past decade. Most of these laws encourage or require schools to screen young children for reading difficulties, train teachers in evidence-based reading instruction and provide targeted support to students who show early signs of dyslexia.

Families of children with dyslexiaeducators and dyslexia advocacy groups widely praised these laws. If schools could identify dyslexia early and respond with evidence-based instruction, reading outcomes would likely improve and fewer children would fall behind.

But what actually happened after these laws passed?

My colleagues and I examined nearly two decades of national student data to answer this question. The results tell a complicated story.

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