Dyslexics,The,Untapped,Scholar education Dyslexics - The Untapped Scholars
Some forms of parent involvement with the school such as communications with school, volunteering, attending school events and parent--parent connections appeared to have little effect on student achievement, especially in high school. Helpi Translation jobs are undertaken by professional translators who are well versed with at least two languages.Translation can work at two levels: inter-state or regional language translation and inter-national or foreign language translation.
Dyslexic thinkers are among the brightest in our schools; whats more, with the right approach, the dyslexic thinking style contains all the ingredients of academic success.Imagine that someone who is only familiar with PCs suddenly comes across an Apple Mac computer for the first time. The interface would look different, and most of the programmes that person had on disk wouldnt load because they were designed for a PC.So the person takes the computer back to the shop and complains that it is broken.That, essentially, is what we are doing with our dyslexic learners.Last summer, we conducted some in-depth research into public attitudes to dyslexia. Im afraid to say the results were not encouraging. One of the astonishing things we discovered was that 75% of the population claim to understand little or nothing about how dyslexic people think.With dyslexic thinkers making up an estimated 10% of the population, most people have either a friend, loved-one, relative, colleague or client with dyslexia. So why are we so in the dark about how dyslexics think?Maybe its because weve never thought to ask them. And that is one of the problems with the current definition of dyslexia as a disability in law.Disabilities are not interesting. The word disability suggests something broken in a person that can never change. If you are a doctor and your patient has lost a leg, you arent going to spend too long looking at why and how it was lost; youre going to arrange for a wheelchair or artificial limb.So it is that we pre-assume that our dyslexic students will never succeed academically, or be able to access reading and writing tasks with ease and enjoyment. And we give them the educational equivalent of an artificial limb coping strategies.Coloured overlays, text-to-speech software, spell-checkers, repetitive drill-based exercises, memory devices we excel in devising ever more support systems which we bolt onto the dyslexic person, without ever asking ourselves the question: How does this person think? And crucially: Is this persons natural thinking style an untapped learning resource? Just as Apple Mac programmes run great on Apple Mac machines, can we design a dyslexic learning programme that honours and utilises dyslexic intelligence?In my time as a dyslexia practitioner and consultant, I have been privileged to work and speak with countless dyslexic children, adults and parents. Heres what I know: dyslexic thinkers are imaginative, intuitive and/or curious people whose main learning tool is their imagination, intuition and curiosity.Dyslexic thinkers are sometimes referred to as visual-spatial learners when all the detail of a learning task is laid out in a clear way, its as if it can be seen in the mind as a whole, and in all its details. Whats more once seen in this way it can be manipulated, highlighting another dyslexic strength: multi-dimensional and lateral thinking ability.No wonder that dyslexic thinkers are found in abundance in professions such as graphic design, architecture and engineering. And that, according to a recent study, if you are dyslexic you are twice as likely to own two or more successful businesses than if you are not.But heres whats interesting. If you look at the main attributes of the academically excellent for example those who come out of university with a first-class degree rather than a 2:1 (and, for my sins, I am one of that crowd myself) you find the same key attributes: strong imaginative and intuitive ability, heightened curiosity, ability to see a problem in all its detail and then manipulate it.In my own dyslexia practice, I have come across something that I call the Simpsons Factor with a frequency too common to be explained away as coincidence. Time and time again, I and my colleagues find ourselves working with a Bart a bright dyslexic child with reading and writing difficulties only to discover that the same child has a sibling a Lisa who excels academically. If the same gene pool produces dyslexic thinkers and scholars with such regularity, maybe the two thinking styles are not so far apart? Are our scholars just the dyslexics who got lucky with their learning experiences and so kept their dyslexic strengths without ever developing a dyslexic difficulty?Thats not to say that every dyslexic thinker is a natural academic scholar, or would wish to take their versatile talents in such a direction. But the elephant in the room is that as educators we have labelled a rich thinking style as a disability. And in doing so, we have disabled not only our dyslexic learners, but the teaching profession itself, which for generations has been blocked from truly engaging with the dyslexic thinking style because they didnt know that it was a thinking style.Interestingly, some recent studies suggest that, when teaching methods are developed with the dyslexic thinking style in mind, they stimulate non-dyslexic learners in new ways too. Rather than having special needs, maybe our dyslexic thinkers are in fact the litmus test of educational planning, showing us the way to new teaching styles which will engage and excite all of our learners together.
Dyslexics,The,Untapped,Scholar