Dyslexia is characterised by extreme difficulty in learning to read, write and spell in spite of adequate intelligence. Even mildly dyslexic students experience school as stressful and unfulfilling from the day they enter school. With their learning needs unmet, most dyslexic students never go on to achieve their potential.
Many of these students spend long hours having extra lessons where they are taught by the same techniques that have already failed them in the classroom. However, dyslexic students need more specific help if they are to succeed in school. Unless teachers are adequately equipped, and students have access to these "different" methods which match their "different" learning styles, we will continue to fail the many gifted potential statesmen, artists and scientists hidden among our dyslexic students, currently being frustrated by a system which does not recognise their special needs.
The Dyslexia Association offers training to teachers in three main areas of literacy instruction. These programmes are suitable for teaching children and adults.
1. Neuro-development of Words NOW! Foundations for Speech, Language, Reading and Spelling
We now know that the best predictor of reading success is the ability of children to "play" with the sounds of language (phonological awareness). However, many reading-disabled students are unable to discriminate, separate and blend the individual sounds of words despite adequate hearing. This is true of dyslexic students as well as children who have had poor language stimulation in the home or who have had a history of chronic middle ear infections.
This programme uses the feel and shape of the mouth to help students develop phonological awareness. This training leads to impressive gains in speech, language, reading and spelling.
2. Dyslexia Association Training in Methods for Teaching Dyslexics
This training course is ideal for teachers who can work with small groups in a tutorial setting. It is a structured phonics programme that ideally meets the needs of Dyslexics, building in fluent responses to letters and letter strings for reading, and automatic written responses to sounds in words for spelling.
3. Comprehension NOW! Mental Imagery for Comprehension, Expressive Language and Thinking
There are a significant number of students who continue to struggle with comprehension even after their decoding difficulties have been addressed. Many students also continue to show delays in expressive language skills.
Research has shown that students labelled as poor listeners, and people who have to read and re-read material several times, and who still do not remember more than a few details, have problems creating a picture for language. For these students, words just seem to go "in one ear and out the other." The usual technique of teaching comprehension by practicing increasingly difficult passages does nothing to improve these students' comprehension because it does not attend to the core deficit.
This innovative programme teaches students to create "movies" as they read so enhancing comprehension and memory. The programme has a strong component of expressive language so that writing skills are also enhanced.