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i would like everyone to help with my research project . its on dyslexia. given below are my objectives
- to know the causes of dyslexia
- to understand the problems that are faced by dyslexics in schools
- to know the nature, services help offered for dyslexics
- to suggest ways to over come the problems faced by dyslexics.
these are my objectives now please frame questions so that i can ask the public about dyslexia. about 10 2 15 will do. the questions should be framed so that its connected wiht the objectives above. pls as quickly as possible thank

2006-08-06 23:05:45 · 4 answers · asked by Aish 1 in Education & Reference Homework Help

4 answers

OK...Answering your questions in order...

Causes of dyslexia: No one knows at this moment. There has been a real increase in the amount of research taking place, and a number of possibilities are beginning to emerge, but the waters are still fairly murky. The overall picture is that dyslexia can be caused by inherited factors, and/or hearing problems at an early age.

Sometimes a child has inherited genes which dispose him or her towards difficulties dealing with the printed word, and has also experienced early hearing problems. These children are often found to be quite severely dyslexic, and need a lot of support through their school and college years, as well as in the workplace.

Problems faced by dyslexics:

# Appear bright, intelligent, and articulate but unable to read, write, or spell at an age-appropriate level.
# Have average- to above-average intelligence, yet may not test well academically; tests well orally, but not written.
# Might be labelled lazy, dumb, careless, immature, "not trying hard enough," or "behavior problem."
# Because dyslexia primarily affects reading while sparing other intellectual abilities, affected individuals might be categorised as not "behind enough" or "bad enough" to be helped in the school setting.
# Might feel dumb and have poor self-esteem, and might be easily frustrated and emotional about school reading or testing.
# Extremely disorderly or compulsively orderly.
# Can be class clown, trouble-maker, or too quiet.
# Had unusually early or late developmental stages (talking, crawling, walking, tying shoes).
# Prone to ear infections; sensitive to foods, additives, and chemical products.

Services offered:
* support in class
* involvement of the SENCO at the school
* special help with the National Strategies for Literacy and Numeracy
* following an individual education plan
* summer literacy or numeracy schools in some secondary schools
* advice and support to your child’s school from a range of professionals
* a full assessment by an educational psychologist for those with the most severe difficulties

Ways to overcome problems: Understanding!!

2006-08-06 23:31:17 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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2015-01-27 08:19:53 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Some dyslexia dysgraphia resources:
http://jasonalster.googlepages.com/home
http://jasonalster.googlepages.com/creativityandrelaxedconcentration
http://dysgraphia-help.blogspot.com/2006/05/dysgraphia-help.html
http://test-anxiety.blogspot.com/2006/05/resources-for-test-anxiety.html
The new video BEING IN CONTROL:Natural Solutions for ADHD Dyslexia and Test Anxiety
Also the book- BEING IN CONTROL : Natural techniques for increasing your potential and creativity for success in school

and great for dysgraphics

Creative Painting For The Young Artist a book teaching the artistic mode of seeing necessary for dysgraphics to learn to paint and draw. Amazon.com
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/9659025122/



New Video helping with better handwriting.
Handwriting is a tool for transfer of knowledge and must comply with acquired rules in order to understand what we read. The CD ROM deals handwriting problems, rules, tips, and exercises. From students who have lower grades and self esteem to physicians who by law have to improve their writing- this CD can help. Based on 10 years experience helping ADHD, dyslexia, dysgraphia - Jason knows what works to improve your handwriting. Simple techniques, demonstrations - a new way of helping people of all ages improve their handwriting and be proud of their own " work of art"

Product Details Amazon.com
Anyone Can Improve Their Handwriting:
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/9659025173/
http://dysgraphia-help.blogspot.com/2006/05/dysgraphia-help.html

Jason Alster
http://jasonalster.googlepages.com/home

2006-08-09 02:32:37 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

If you find out any answers to your
"-to know the nature, services help offered for dyslexics"
Can you let me know....I'm been dyslexic for a good 25 years now and I'm getting pretty tired of it.
Thanks!

P.S. They should start helping us by changing the disorder name to something easier to spell....

2006-08-06 23:11:16 · answer #4 · answered by oldmanscrooge 2 · 1 0

Dyslexia International definitions.

Dyslexia is widely accepted to be a specific learning disability. That is, dyslexia has biological traits that differentiate it from other learning disabilities. However, the specific definition of dyslexia varies somewhat across communities.

The World Health Organization (WHO)

A disorder manifested by difficulty learning to read, despite conventional instruction, adequate intelligence and sociocultural opportunity. It is dependent upon fundamental cognitive disabilities which are frequently of constitutional origin". ICD-10, The International Statistical Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, tenth revision ICIDH-2, The International Classification of Impairments, Activities, and Participation

US National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD) / International Dyslexia Association

Defines Dyslexia as a specific learning disability of neurological origin. Characterized with difficulties with accurate and/or fluent word recognition, spelling and decoding abilities.

Canadian Government

The Government of Canada’s Health Portal links its description to the BC HealthGuide web site using their definition. Dyslexia is defined here with a difficulty with the alphabet, reading, writing, and spelling in spite of normal to above average intelligence, conventional teaching, and adequate sociocultural opportunity. Dyslexia is thought to be genetic and hereditary. Dyslexia is not caused by poor vision. Dyslexia is diagnosed following psychological and educational tests that determine language and other academic abilities, IQ and problem-solving skills, and is only diagnosed if the reading disability is not a result of another condition.

The British Dyslexia Association

Dyslexia is a difference in the brain area that deals with language. It affects the underlying skills that are needed for learning to read, write and spell. Brain imaging techniques show that dyslexic people process information differently. In a report on the House of Lords Dyslexia debate which took place on Wednesday 7 December 2005 is now available the Government confirms dyslexia is not a myth.

Biological Bases of Dyslexia

Developmental dyslexia appears to be the result of differences in affected individuals' neural organization for language and reading. Developmental dyslexia also appears to have a genetic component, such that it can tend to occur in multiple members of the same family. Reading difficulties in dyslexia can vary in their severity. The disorder is not restricted to childhood, but can persist through adulthood. In addition, while early reports suggested dyslexia is more prevalent in boys, more recent studies have indicated it is not sex-linked, and occurs both in boys and girls with equal frequency.

Most theories focus on non-primary areas in the frontal lobe and the temporal lobe.[6] Studies have linked several forms of dyslexia to genetic markers[7][8][9].


Variations and related disorders

Dyslexia is a learning disorder. Its underlying cause is believed to be a brain-based disorder that influences the ability to read written language. It is diagnosed in individuals who fail to learn to read in the absence of a verbal or nonverbal intellectual impairment, sensory deficit (e.g., a visual deficit or hearing loss), pervasive developmental deficit or a frank neurological impairment. The following disorders are sometimes confused with dyslexia because they can also lead to difficulty reading:

* Auditory Processing Disorder is a disorder that affects the ability to encode auditory information. It can lead to problems with auditory working memory and auditory sequencing.
* Dyspraxia - a neurological disorder characterized by a marked difficulty in carrying out routine tasks involving balance, fine-motor control, and kinesthetic coordination. Which is most common in dyslexics who also have an attention deficit disorder.
* Verbal Dyspraxia - a neurological disorder characterized by marked difficulty in the use of speech sounds, which is the result of an immaturity in the speech production area of the brain.
* Dysgraphia - a neurological disorder characterized by distorted and incorrect handwriting.
* Dyscalculia - a neurological disorder characterized by a problem with learning fundamentals and one or more of the basic numerical skills. Often people with this disorder can understand very complex mathematical concepts and principles but have difficulty processing formulas and even basic addition and subtraction.


Facts and statistics

Between 5 and 15 percent of the population can be diagnosed as suffering from various degrees of dyslexia.

Dyslexia's main manifestation is a difficulty in developing reading skills in elementary school children. Those difficulties result from reduced ability to associate visual symbols with verbal sounds. While motivational factors must also be reviewed in assessing poor performance, dyslexia is considered to be present from birth. Most scientific criteria for dyslexia exclude cases that can be explained as arising from environmental factors such as lack of education or sensory deficits.

Current scientific theories focus on the hypothesis that dyslexia stems from a deficit in phonological awareness. This hypothesis suggests that affected individuals have difficulty analyze the words they hear into discrete segments (such as phonemes), which in turn leads to difficulty learning spelling-sound correspondences.

Dyslexia can be substantially compensated for with proper therapy, training and equipment.

The current consensus is that dyslexia occurs in both sexes with equal frequency. It was previously reported more frequently in males, likely due to selection factors and bias.

Although they are different disorders, dyslexia co-occurs with attention deficit disorders (ADD or ADHD) at a rate of 30-50%.

Treatment

Only traditional educational remedial techniques have any record of improving the reading ability of those diagnosed with dyslexia [10].

Remedial efforts focusing on phonological awareness training (often involving breaking words into their basic sounds and rearranging these sounds to produce different words) can improve reading skills. The earlier the phonological regimen is taken on, the better the overall result.

There is no evidence that colored lenses, any visual training, or similar proposed treatments are of any use. Anecdotal reports of success can be explained by other factors. Similarly, the belief that keeping a child active, perhaps through housework or physical exercise, will help with dyslexia is false [11].

Physiology

Researchers studying the brains of dyslexics have found that during reading tasks, dyslexics show reduced activity in the left inferior parietal cortex. It is anecdotally claimed that it is not that uncommon for dyslexics who have trained themselves to cope with their affliction to develop uncannily efficient visual memories which aid in reading and comprehending large quantities of information much faster than is typical. Individuals with dyslexia commonly show 10 times more brain activity when reading. Sometimes, depending of the type and extent, also writing, listening and speaking. However, increased brain activity is not necessarily a sign of better processing. Conversely, some dyslexics may show a natural dislike of reading and, in consequence, compensate by developing unique verbal communication skills, inter-personal expertise, visual-spatial abilities and leadership skills.

In 1979, anatomical differences in the brain of a young dyslexic were documented. Albert Galaburda of Harvard Medical School noticed that the language center in a dyslexic brain showed microscopic flaws known as ectopias and microgyria. Both affect the normal six-layer structure of the cortex. An ectopia is a collection of neurons that have pushed up from lower cortical layers into the outermost one. A microgyrus is an area of cortex that includes only four layers instead of six. These flaws affect connectivity and functionality of the cortex in critical areas related to auditory processing and visual processing, which seems consistent with the hypothesis that dyslexia stems from a phonological awareness deficit.

Another study regarding genetic regions on chromosomes 1 and 6 have been found that might be linked to dyslexia. Presenting the argument, dyslexia is a conglomeration of disorders that all affect similar and associated areas of the cortex.


Effect of Language Orthography

Some studies have concluded that speakers of languages whose orthography has a strong correspondence between letter and sound (e.g. Korean, Italian and Spanish) suffer less from effects of dyslexia than speakers of languages where the letter is less closely linked to the sound (e.g. English and French). [12]

In one of these studies, reported in Seymour et al.[13], the word-reading accuracy of first-grade children of different European languages was measured. English children had an accuracy of just 40%, whereas among children of most other European languages accuracy was about 95%, with of French and Danish children somewhere in the middle at about 75%; Danish and French are known to have an irregular pronunciation.

However, this does not mean that dyslexia is caused by orthography: instead, Ziegler et al.[14] claim that the dyslexia suffered by German or Italian dyslectics is of the same kind as the one suffered by the English ones, supporting the theory that the origin of dyslexia is biological. However, dyslexia has more pronounced effects on more difficult languages.


Characteristics

Diagnosis of dyslexia is made by a qualified professional. It is typically made on an exclusionary basis - that is, dyslexia is only diagnosed when reading difficulties cannot be explained as resulting from a more general impairment affecting sensory or neurological abilities.

Recent advances in neuroimaging and genetics could help identify children at risk of dyslexia before they learn read, however none of these techniques are currently being used for this purpose. Currently, the only way to positively diagnose dyslexia is through behavioral testing and


General

Individuals with dyslexia:

* Appear bright, intelligent, and articulate but are unable to read, write, or spell at an age-appropriate level.
* Have average- to above-average intelligence, yet may have poor academic achievement; may have good oral language abilities but will perform much more poorly on similar written-language tests.
* Might be labelled lazy, dumb, careless, immature, "not trying hard enough," or as having a "behavior problem."
* Because dyslexia primarily affects reading while sparing other intellectual abilities, affected individuals might be categorised as not "behind enough" or "bad enough" to receive additional help in a school setting.
* Might feel dumb and have poor self-esteem, and might be easily frustrated and emotional about school reading or testing.
* Might try to hide their reading weaknesses with ingenious compensatory *strategies.
* Might learn best through hands-on experience, demonstrations, experimentation, observation, and visual aids.
* Can show talents in other areas such as art, drama, music, sports, mechanics, story-telling, sales, business, designing, building, or engineering.
* Have related problems with inattention in a school setting; for instance they might seem to "zone out" or daydream often; get lost easily or loses track of time; and have difficulty sustaining attention.


Vision, reading, and spelling

Contrary to how it has been portrayed in the popular press, individuals with dyslexia do not perceive words backwards or upside down. In fact, visual problems are typically ruled out before a diagnosis of dyslexia can be made. Early studies of dyslexia did focus on the possibility that dyslexia is caused by visual difficulties, however very little evidence was found to support this theory. Likewise, there is little evidence that visual training provides effective treatment.[15].

* A popular theory in the 1970s suggested dyslexics may have Irlen Syndrome, a visual deficit in which the glare of the white page against black letters causes the words to shake, shiver, spin, etc. after a few minutes of reading. The proposed treatment was the use of colored plastic overlays that were thought help anchor the words to the page. This treatment has fallen out of favor as scientific studies have failed to support these claims. (See link below to asfedia).
* Spelling errors - Beause of difficulty learning letter-sound correspondences, individuals with dyslexia might tend to misspell words, or leave vowels out of words (e.g., spelling "magic" as mjc).
* Reading - Due to dyslexics' excellent long term memory, young students tend to memorize beginning readers, but are unable to read individual words or phrases.


Writing and motor skills

Because of literacy problems, an individual with dyslexia may have difficulty with handwriting. However, slow or messy handwriting should not be confused with dyslexia.

Some studies have also reported gross motor difficulties in dyslexia, including motor skills disorder. This difficulty is indicated by clumsiness and poor coordination. The relationship between motor skills and reading difficulties is poorly understood but could be linked to the role of the cerebellum in the development of reading and motor abilities.[16].


Math abilities

Dylslexia should not be confused with dyscalculia, a learning disability marked by severe difficulties with mathematics. Individuals with dyslexia can be gifted in math while having poor reading skills. However, in spite of this they might have difficulty with word problems (i.e., math problems that rely on written text rather than numbers or formulas).




Public support

In the United States, Canada, New Zealand and in the United Kingdom, some people say that there is a lack of adequate support and a general lack of interest in the learning disabilities of children in public schools. This has recently led to legal action by private parties against public schools in the United States and state schools in the United Kingdom. In English law, the recent case of Skipper v Calderdale Metropolitan Borough School (2006) EWCA Civ 238 the Court of Appeal applied Phelps v London Borough of Hillingdon (2001) 2 AC 619 as the landmark case on the failure to diagnose dyslexia (see duty of care in English law), and to hold that the appellant could pursue her claim against her school for humiliation, lost confidence, and lost self-esteem, and for loss of earnings following its failing to diagnose and treat her dyslexia despite the fact that, as Latham LJ. says at para 29:

"The extent to which her dyslexia could have been ameliorated or provided for will always remain uncertain, as will the extent to which that would have affected her performance in public examinations; the evidence that we have includes material to suggest that she, not surprisingly, reacted adversely to the break-up of her parents marriage when she was 15, in other words at a critical time in her education. Whether any improvement in her examination results would have led to her life taking a significantly different course will also be a matter for some speculation."

Some charitable organizations like the Scottish Rite Foundation have undertaken the task of testing for dyslexia and making training classes and materials available, often without cost, for teachers and students.[17][18][19]

In England and Wales, the failure of schools to diagnose and provide remedial help for dyslexia following the House of Lords decision in the case of Pamela Phelps has created an entitlement for students with dyslexia in Higher Education to receive support funded via the Disabled Students Allowance. Support can take the form of IT equipment (software and hardware) as well as personal assistance, also known as non-medical helper support. Dyslexic students will also be entitled to special provision in examinations such as additional time to allow them to read and comprehend exam questions.

The British Disability Discrimination Act also covers dyslexia.

"In some cases, people have 'coping strategies' which cease to work in certain circumstances (for example, where someone who stutters or has dyslexia is placed under stress). If it is possible that a person's ability to manage the effects of the impairment will break down so that these effects will sometimes occur, this possibility must be taken into account when assessing the effects of the impairment." — Paragraph A8, Guidance to the Definitions of Disability


Controversy

Some disagreement exists as to whether dyslexia does indeed exist as a disorder, or whether it simply reflects individual differences among different readers.

"The Dyslexia Myth" is a documentary that appeared as part of the Dispatches series produced by British broadcaster Channel 4[20]. First aired in September 2005, it claims to expose myths and misconceptions that surround dyslexia. It argues that the common understanding of dyslexia is not only false but makes it more difficult to provide the reading help that hundreds of thousands of children desperately need. Drawing on years of intensive academic research on both sides of the Atlantic, it challenged the existence of dyslexia as a separate condition, and highlighted the many different forms of reading style.

2006-08-06 23:23:22 · answer #5 · answered by JJ 4 · 0 0

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