My son is severely dyslexic and he had visual tracking problems. He said letters jumped all over the page and words never looked the same twice.
My son, did division in Kindegarten...not just 4 divided by 2, but 25 divided by 2 and he understood the concept of fractions and remainders, as long as he could had to do it in his head. Not on paper.
He would try to read, he was 6 years old, I remember him standing in the living room, hitting the palm of his hand on his head, say 'I am stupid' because he could not keep up with his class in reading.
At 8, he got papers back from his teachers, he never looked at them, he just shoved them in his back. 'Why should I look, I know I did awful'.
By 9 he was angry, he worked harded then anyone in the class but got the worse grades, it is not fair. I hate school.
He did not really start reading until he was 11. He has a greast sense of time and direction.
When he did start reading, he had a very strange presentation ...he finally recognized words like 'hot' but when he read it outloud..it came out 'cold'.
He had about 10 common opposites that this happened with.
He was going to a reading specialist at the time, who said after 20 years, he had never seen anyting like it, his brain was actually translating words into opposites.
When he printed he was dysgraphic and it carried over into his cursive for at least 2 or 3 years. His cursive was a mirror image. It was strange.
At 15, he was in middle school, when the guidance department hand him a booklet and told him to pick up what classes he wanted to take in HS. They had an assembly, where when he gave in his booklet, in front of his class, the guidance counselor said, 'You should not have done this, you are special ed, you don't get choices'. I came home and he had punched holes in the wall, he was so angry and embarrassed, he told me he was going to be 16 and he was dropping out of school When he told me what had happened, I called his school, I got the assistant principal, who went home that night with a new anal orifice.
3 days later, the man cornered my son in the hall, and told my son that he should be proud of his Mother, that she stood up for him and did the right thing.
You might want to read a book about a kid with dyslexia I remember reading to my son...'A boy named Brian' I think was the name. My son always read the word Brian has brain, and that actually is mentioned in the book. I think it was why he liked it.
I hope this helps. BTW--if you hear that kids with dyslexia are slow or stupid. He graduated from High school, reading at grade level. His grades were awful, he hated school, but he made up his first 5 years in school that were wasted. Which show how much more the average kid could be learning if they applied themselves.
2006-10-06 16:40:26
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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First of all you might want to look up common symptoms of dyslexia to have an idea of what the symptoms are and how they can vary between people.
I have a rather mild dyslexia. I can tell you what problems I have because of it. Many dyslexics have other or worse problems than I, but here's what my case is like.
I read very slowly, often misread words or sentences or skip words, I skip lines or read the same line many times in a row. It's hard for me to read out loud. When reading I notice the details more than the larger context. Like when studying history I could remember names, places, years and specific events, but had the time order all messed up and had problems remembering the whole context or explaining it in my own words.
With writing I misspell words a lot. I often even skip words or parts of words, add a letter to a word that doesn't belong there or write a completely wrong letter instead of another one. I don't switch letters much (liek htis), but many other dyslexics have that problem. I often mess up the word order though.
Fortunately for me I have a good photographic memory. I always re-read whatever I write many times and often I'll notice that something doesn't look right, so I can look up what the word should be spelled like or try other variations until it looks right to me. I am a perfectionist, so I spend a lot of time correcting any text I write because I don't want to come across as dumb for my spelling problems. If I didn't take all the extra effort it would be hard to read what I write, it wouldn't make much sense.
So my main problem with dyslexia is that it takes up too much time for me to read or write, because not only is it difficult for me, but I have to spend a lot of time to get it right. And this is just mild dyslexia. Many people have a lot worse problems with it.
I have never had problems with left or right, sense of time or organizing myself.
Apart from the symptoms, dyslexics often have problems with other people's attitudes towards us. We frequently hear that we're just lazy or stupid and that there's nothing wrong with us and that if we can't spell it's our own fault and some people sure seem to like taking a crap on us for our spelling. People also seem to think that spell checks work wonders and tell us we have no excuse to spell wrong. Well, spell checkers can certainly help a little by spotting some spelling mistakes, but they don't understand context and don't fix problems like wrong words, wrong form of words and such, so they don't correct the text completely.
I hope this gives you a picture of what it's like.
2006-10-09 03:04:54
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answer #2
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answered by undir 7
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The word ‘dyslexia’ means ‘difficulty with words or language’, and is frequently used to refer to a child — or adult — who seems much brighter than what his reading and written work suggest.
Developmental Dyslexia is a condition which causes difficulty with reading and writing. It is a learning disability that is likely present from birth. Its standard definition is a difficulty in reading and writing in spite of normal development of intelligence, cognitive and sensory abilities.
The word "dyslexia" comes from the Greek words δυς- dys- ("difficulty with") and λέξις lexis ("words" or "lexicon"). It is a brain-based condition with biochemical and genetic markers. People are identified as dyslexic when their reading or writing problems cannot be explained by a lack of intellectual ability, inadequate instruction, or sensory problems such as poor eyesight.
The term dyslexia is also sometimes used to refer to the the loss of reading ability following brain damage. This form of dyslexia is more often referred to as either acquired dyslexia or "Alexia". Dyslexia primarily impacts reading and writing abilities; however, other difficulties have been identified including deficits in processing spoken language, as well as non-language difficulties.
Dyslexia is not limited to reversing the order of letters in reading or writing. Nor is it a visual perception deficit that involves reading letters or words backwards or upside down, as is often implied in popular culture.
2006-10-06 16:22:29
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answer #3
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answered by junaidi71 6
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I have no idea approximately discovering a medication, in step with se, however I discovered find out how to make it worse.....finding out specific languages. It was once difficult adequate for this dyslexic earlier than I began with farsi, arabic, kurdish, spanish, french, somali, and so forth.... however now I can slightly learn in any respect.
2016-08-29 06:44:19
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answer #4
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answered by Anonymous
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Having aixelsyD is kinda ekil gnidaer everything sdrawkcab and forwards. Are uoy starting oot feel cixelsyD now? You evah to read yrev slowly ot understand tahw you era reading. It really skcus!!!
2006-10-06 16:25:46
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answer #5
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answered by gillamacs 3
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people with dyslexia are often confused. get dates wrong. get left and right mixed up. here are some websites for more info.
http://www.lboro.ac.uk/admin/elsu/dysques.htm
http://www.goaskalice.columbia.edu/2468.html
http://www.dyslexia.com/
2006-10-06 16:20:09
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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http://www.cyh.com/HealthTopics/HealthTopicDetails.aspx?p=243&np=293&id=2200
2006-10-06 17:47:47
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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tis a very hdr contion becaes uo confse ebvthing!
2006-10-06 16:24:00
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answer #8
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answered by Manny L 3
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my freind has this and writes backwords their brain i think works backworks
2006-10-06 16:41:35
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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I wouldnt bother much or feel sorry.
2006-10-06 17:28:46
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answer #10
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answered by weirdoonee 4
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