Over the past 8 years I have taught 26 dyslexic students. Most of them were certified
dyslexics by experts in Singapore and Kuala Lumpur.
Among
all the 26 students, only 2 had exceptional problems with mathematics. I have
also taught one student mathematics. She is an intelligent girl and was very
fluent in her English and could read more fluently than most students in her
school but had problems grasping mathematics. She READ FLUENTLY and as such she
cannot be dyslexic. But she had a problem with mathematics. Would it be proper
to call her dyslexic just because some Association decides to include dyscalculia
and dysgraphia under the dyslexia umbrella?
I had
two students who were very active and I had to literally make them run around
my sofa set every 15 minutes or so. Both insisted that I change the book we
were reading every 15 minutes or so. They had similar problems as my dyslexic
students when it came to reading in English. My other 24 students did not have
hyperactivity problem. Why would these unscrupulous Associations want to include
ADD under the dyslexia umbrella if not to make money from parents of dyslexic
children?
One
student came to me with coloured glasses. His father said it was prescribed by
an optician in Singapore. I asked that student to try and read with his ordinary
glasses instead of his coloured glasses. That was the last day he used his
coloured glasses. Apparently coloured glasses are used by those who have Irlen
Syndrome. None of my 26 students ever complained about words “running out of
their pages” or “words blurring”. I am not suggesting that Irlen Syndrome does
not exist just because my dyslexic students did not experience “words jumping
up and down or running out of pages”. However, I would say that dyslexia is not
Irlen Syndrome and children with this syndrome are not necessarily dyslexic.
I had
one student, whom I had called Ted in my blog, who could not read because he has had astigmatism from birth. Once
this was corrected he could read with no problem. All I had to do was to teach
him a bit of phonics which he had probably missed out because of his eye sight.
He learnt that very quickly. Prior to getting glasses to cope with his ailment
he was coping with class work by memorizing his books. After two months I asked his parents to stop sending him to me as he could read with ease - he was not dyslexic.The Associations, if
they could, will want you to believe that those with eye problems are dyslexic.
One of
my Face Book friend’s writes on Auditory Processing Disorder (APD). Obviously
there are people with auditory problems. However, APD should not come under the
umbrella of dyslexia. If you have this problem (APD) then you should talk with
my friend Graeme Wadlow not with someone who teaches dyslexic children. None of
my dyslexic students had/have APD.
If all
the above ailments and more are classified as dyslexia then a parent has to
bring his child to the optician to get his eyes checked for which he will have
to pay a hefty price (just for the tests). He may be cajoled into buying coloured glasses and after
sometime still find his child is unable to read. He may be recommended to buy
some drugs. None of my dyslexic students were on drugs. Are drugs right for your child? But, you see, the Associations can sell drugs to parents with
dyslexic children if ADD and ADHD are included under dyslexia. All these are unnecessary
waste of money and are spent simply because some big boys have decided to
define dyslexia according to their whim and fancy to benefit monetarily.
My
friend Dr.Selznick has put it very nicely in an article in his Shut Down Learner column.
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