Looking for a good book series for your elementary school child? Check out the Hank Zipzer books, by Henry Winkler and Lin Oliver!
Disability Documentation Guidelines
Important & useful information for high school students!
The College Board announced a new policy that is now in effect as of January 1, 2017. The policy makes it easier to request accommodations on the SAT®, PSAT™10, PSAT/NMSQT®, SAT Subject Tests™, and AP®Exams.
Now, requests only need to confirm that: 1) the accommodation is in the student’s IEP/504 plan and 2) the student uses the accommodation when taking tests at school.
Richard Branson Writes Letter to Michigan Teen With Dyslexia
We always enjoy the advice Richard Branson gives younger students!
“Just don’t worry if you find things difficult… remember: school does not define you.”
The Super d! Show
Be sure to check out The Super D! Show with your kids!
“Dyslexiaville truly fills a void that parents like me are seeking for our kids with reading disabilities.”
– Lyn Pollard
Founding Member, Decoding Dyslexia Texas
What One Student Wishes Teachers Knew About Dyslexia
Watch this segment of Good Things Utah featuring Decoding Dyslexia – UT‘s Karee Atkinson and YES! Program‘s Ava speaking about dyslexia. This is good to share with your kids, too!
11 Children’s Books That Help Kids Understand Learning Disabilities
Another good list of books to help young students better understand learning disabilities.
Jay Leno’s Advice for My Dyslexic Son
“Over the course of this past year, through conversations like this one and the letters he received, Aidan didn’t discover the secret to success for dyslexics. If anything, he discovered that there was no secret — except persistence, humor, improvisation and grit.”
Be sure to read Aidan’s book, “Looking for Heroes: One Boy, One Year, 100 Letters.” It’s great!
Water Polo Players’ Dreams Come True With Naming Of Olympic Team
Another Olympian role model for our kids who build confidence and self-esteem through participation in sports. Kami Craig of the US Water Polo Team:
“Growing up in school, I had to deal with dyslexia and ADHD. Sports (water polo) has always been a safe haven for me. Sports has taken me so far. I feel so fortunate to be in this position.”
Celebrity Spotlight: Anderson Cooper No Longer Hides His Dyslexia
Anderson Cooper shares: “I grew up in a home where reading and writing had great value,” Cooper has said. His brother was “a voracious reader,” always carrying a book around with him. So Cooper did the same. But he admits, “I would just pretend to read it, because I had trouble reading and making sense of words, in particular, letters.”
Chasing Gold, Olympic Shot Putter Michelle Carter Opens Up About ADHD and Dyslexia
Three-time Olympian shot putter (and 2016 gold medalist!), Michelle Carter, talks about being dyslexic and ADHD.
“Talking publicly about my ADHD and dyslexia is something I’ve never been shy about,” says Carter, who is a powerful advocate for dyslexia and encourages kids and their parents whenever she can. “I tell them you can do whatever you set your mind to—you just may do it differently. You may have to work a little bit harder, but you can do it.”
That’s the lesson her parents taught her after she was evaluated and diagnosed with dyslexia and ADHD in grade school. “I was definitely a handful back then,” she recalls. “I could not sit down long enough to study and to learn.”
Q&A with Logan Dooley
Watching the Olympics? Have a dyslexic athlete in your house?
Olympic athlete Logan Dooley shares that “[s]omething quirky about myself is that I am severely dyslexic.”
Max Brooks on Dyslexia at EdRev 2016
Thankful that this video of Max Brooks from PEN’s EdRev 2016 was produced by Understood and shared on Facebook! Watch it and then show your students. EdRev is an excellent student-focused conference that takes place at the AT&T Park in San Francisco each April.
Weston Boy’s Mug Business Is Global Slam Dunk
Here’s the great backstory about a young entrepreneur!
In a Student’s Own Words: Dyslexia — Disability or Difference?
Read this honest, emotional essay written by Annabel, a teenage student who definitely has the strength to be successful in life.
“As someone with learning disabilities, working the school system feels like I’m a minnow being asked to swim up stream.”
What a 10 Year Old with Dyslexia Wants the World to Know – Unedited
An unedited essay written by 10-year old Leia, who has also published her own book, The Dyslexic Renegade.
“I want the world to know that dyslexics are smart. I want the world to know that if you are dyslexic then you should not be imbarisd. The more we tell people the more people will know and the more people will be happy to know more dyslexics. “