Dyslexia and
functional literacy
My blog
during ‘Children in Need’ highlighted the existence of over a million students
in UK schools every day, who will not be functionally
literate as adults. Scaling this for the USA we are talking about 5-6
million children in USA in schools this week.
This 20 % of
the population will contain many who could be identified as Dyslexic. This will be despite opportunity. There has to be reasons why people find reading
difficult and are unable to develop their capability.
Many will be
people who should have been wearing glasses when they were young. Or they
should have been wearing appropriate glasses. To be honest, I do not know about
the USA but here in the UK there is no financial incentive for an optician to
really look that closely at a child’s visual needs. Most teachers do not know
how to look for the clues, indicators.
Many will be
from families where the parent (s) found it hard work as well, so there will be
few books and reading material around little academic expectation. In many homes there is consensus that ‘books
and reading does your head in’. It is not fun, not enjoyable; whatever their
reading teachers tell them!
Many may have
found that when they get glasses, ‘their visual stress’ problems are not
solved. They need more, possibly prisms,
different font size, different ambient lighting, and different light mix
bouncing off the page or coming out of the screen.
If these
other issues or barriers are not removed then their reading will not develop
properly, it will also affect what some people refer to as intelligence. In itself
a consequence of opportunity or experience. I am unsure of what intelligence is,
and what capability is. How do you differentiate between the two? Anyway which ‘intelligence’
do they mean?
A slow
runner may be ridiculed or marginalised because they are slow. Being a slow
runner though does not put limitations on the rest of your life. It does not cast
a ‘slur’ on your brain, on your very being like being a slow reader.
Fast readers
rarely have functional literacy problems. Reading speed (Oral Reading fluency
in words per minute reading aloud) is an amazingly good indicator of potential academic
performance. If it takes longer to read something,
a book, an exam paper, you are not likely to remember how the ideas fit together;
usually it goes with misreading, guessing at words and not being able to read
for long, or being a slow writer. .
What the
Dyslexic ‘condition’ tells us is that people who are slow readers can
demonstrate and develop their capability but they need to learn from others the
strategies to get around the reading issues.
Dyslexic people
know that slow reading or functional literacy problems do not have anything to
do with intelligence. The two are not the same thing.
In a way
those diagnosed as Dyslexic are the lucky ones. Most people who are slow
readers or have functional literacy problems will be bullied by society into
just accepting their place on the ‘edge’. They will be talked at, talked about,
accused of being lazy, easily distracted clumsy treated as lesser beings. The joke is that it is possible to enable
people to read more effectively/
As a final
point one attempt at this has been /is ‘explicit systematic phonics’. Ok one
question.
·
What were the examinations results like for
those in the Clackmannanshire experiment when they reached 16?
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