Dyslexia

“Dyslexia is biological in origin and tends to run in families, but environmental factors may also contribute to it. Dyslexia affects all kinds of people regardless of intelligence, race or social class. About 10% of the population have some form of dyslexia. About 4% are severely dyslexic, including some 375,000 schoolchildren. Dyslexia causes difficulties in learning to read, write and spell. Short-term memory, mathematics, concentration, personal organisation and sequencing may be affected. The effects of dyslexia can largely be overcome by skilled specialist teaching and the use of compensatory strategies.” The Dyslexia Institute, 2002

Dyslexia was first diagnosed in 1896 by Dr Pringle Morgan as ‘word blindness’. Since then our knowledge of dyslexia, and how to help children and adults with dyslexia, has increased.

I will assess children and adults, and tailor an individual programme to address their needs. I am trained to use the following programmes:

  • Dyslexia Institute’s Literacy Programme (DILP)
  • Alpha to Omega (Beve Hornsby, Frula Shear and Julie Pool of The Hornsby Institute, now Dyslexia Action)
  • Additional Literacy Kit (Dyslexia Action)
  • Units of Sound (Dyslexia Action)
  • Adult Literacy Kit (Dyslexia Action)
  • Touchtyping (TTRS)

These programmes are all “structured” to help reading and spelling make sense; “cumulative” to build on learning; “multi-sensory” using visual, aural and tactile techniques; and “thorough” with constant revision.

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Posted on Friday, December 28, 2007 at 07:55PM by Registered CommenterAmanda McLeod in | CommentsPost a Comment

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