Arguably, children have it hard when
finding out that they are in fact not illiterate, they are dyslexic - which is
why they struggle with spelling, reading or writing. They need extra resources
to help them move forward and in some cases, when dyslexia goes undetected it
can cause illiteracy and severe learning difficulties. Not only do they have to
cope with finding out that they have a common ‘disability’ but it is made
obvious to their peers that they are struggling, which unfortunately leaves
them prone to bullying.
I frequently went through my school
years thinking that I was incapable of learning and often mentally punished
myself for being unintelligent. I used to sit next to my best friend trying to
copy her work – not because I could not do the work myself, but because she had
such neat writing. It strikes me as being really silly now, I did not often confer
with other peers for answers (except in maths – which the less said about at
this stage the better) – I just really liked her handwriting. I was envious of
how her intelligence seemed tie in neatly and flow through the tip of her
Parker pen.
Needless to say, I was one of the
‘lucky’ ones. Nobody even knew that I am dyslexic. Not the other children, nor
the teachers and neither did I. In fact, it was not until I was sat in my
A-Level Media class and we were given five minutes to read a page – when asked
if everyone had finished reading, I was the only person in the class that
answered “no” in a chorus of “yes”. It was then, that the first person noticed
that I was that little bit slower and found it more difficult to engage in
reading than my peers and advised me that when I get to University I go to be
tested for dyslexia.
At the age of 20 I have to say that
neither the test, nor the results bothered me in the slightest. I have always
known that I struggle with reading – black text, white background, forget it.
It takes me approximately five minutes just to read through a paragraph because
the white is so piercing and bright. I tend to find the nice shade of apple green
acetate helps me read at a slightly less than average speed but faster than my
normal white with black text speed. Spelling, well I am okay, not brilliant but
then who is?
So enough about me and back to my main
point. It is now being acknowledged more in classrooms, children appear to be
getting more support now than ever, which is great news for whatever statistic
the government wants to brandish at dyslexia. Hold on, I seem to be missing out
one important thing – the cynics.
There are two parts to our society,
those who tolerate and those who do not. Fine. A minority of people are blind
sighted by the very thought and understanding around dyslexia and appear to
think that it is not a case of children or adults having a legitimate learning
disability, and that it is a case of laziness or lack of intelligence. This is
simply not the case. Like I said in previous paragraphs, I am dyslexic. I
completed GCSEs, A-Levels and received a First Class Honours at University –
all because I worked extremely hard. I took no extra help, but it was the
knowing about the condition as well as knowing measures that I can use to help
myself that made me achieve more than I could ever imagine.
In 2010, BBC Three broadcast a
documentary about Kara Tointon (Dawn, Eastenders) and her living with dyslexia.
‘Don’t Call Me Stupid’ was broadcast to raise awareness of dyslexia and how to
live with it. It was like looking in the mirror. Like Tointon, I struggle to
read books from cover to cover and wish I could experience the same depths of
imagination as a non-dyslexic person experiences when they read books. By
watching this documentary, I realised that what I have to work through, is what
many other people with dyslexia feel too. It helps to know that there are
always people out there who are willing to help and advise.
Through the lack of understanding many
people dismiss dyslexia too easily. Dyslexia is a broad learning disability
that does not affect everyone in the same way – those who live with it, will do
so for the rest of their lives – some of who do not realise that they have it.
Dyslexia Action say that approximately 10% of the UK population has some form
of dyslexia. They also state that ‘it doesn’t affect intelligence but predominately causes difficulties
with reading, writing and spelling… The social impact of dyslexia is extensive.
If you cannot learn to read, you cannot read to learn and everything we do at
school and throughout life requires us to have the skills to be able to access
written information. Above and beyond the difficulties and barriers dyslexia
presents it is the damage that low self-esteem can have, which is life-long’ (Dyslexia Action, 2010) .
So are we a dyslexic nation? Well, like I said in the previous
paragraph, 10% of us are. Do we hide behind it as an excuse? No, it is
essentially a matter of tolerance and understanding towards those who have it.
I will not use the phrase ‘suffer with it’ because it is not necessarily
something that we have to suffer with – I certainly did not. Though there are
many who do struggle through because the help they need is not as readily
available as it should be. If awareness is raised, then we are certainly going
in the right direction to help others who are feeling held back by something
that should be seen as insignificant to their lives.
To find out more about Dyslexia
Action, visit www.dyslexiaaction.org.uk.
Please take a minute to sign a petition for Initial Teacher Training (ITT) to provide mandatory teacher training in dyslexia - to sign, just follow the link: http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/20674
Please take a minute to sign a petition for Initial Teacher Training (ITT) to provide mandatory teacher training in dyslexia - to sign, just follow the link: http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/20674
Over and out.
Weez
An eye opening article - thank you!!
ReplyDeleteThank you. This topic was particularly personal to me and I felt the importance on this occasion to get my point across to as many people as possible :). Thanks for you support.
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