In this post I am going to give you some essential tips on how to reduce the impact of dyslexia when writing lengthy pieces of work for school or college. I hope that this article will help your dyslexic student start to focus more on what they can do rather than what limitations they are facing.
Some Background First.
As supporters of dyslexic students whether you are a parent or a teacher, you will experience a number of reactions from your student when they are faced with having to write an essay.
The student may be reluctant to engage in writing an essay. They may display a range of emotions in reaction to the need to get the work done. It is not unusual to see anger, frustration, lack of engagement, withdrawal from the task at hand. It may be that the child or young person uses their humour to disrupt the process.
In a school and home environment, when faced with these behaviours it is so easy to react to them in a way that makes the whole process of writing even more unpleasant for the student. This happens because we are dealing with the symptoms rather than cause. We are not getting to the point that is troubling our child or student.
I don’t consider myself in any way to be any kind of expert on dyslexia, but as a parent of a dyslexic daughter and as someone who is probably neurodiverse, I have seen and experienced the stress and anxiety that comes with writing an essay. Either for my daughter and definitely for myself.
Over the years I have started to understand that it is one thing to struggle academically (dyslexia and intelligence is not linked, there are many dyslexic geniuses out there as well as people with dyslexia that are not perhaps as clever as others.) but before you even know whether you are an academic genius or not with dyslexia, as a child or student you face a need to be ever more focused, resilient, thick skinned, determined because the educational content is not easily consumed. It is not easily consumed because you may find that not only do you have dyslexia you also have visual stress (Meares-Irlens Syndrome) a condition that makes it extremely difficult to read text. When staring at a sheet that you need to write on or in referring to texts, visual stress distorts the text making it at best extremely tiring to read and at worst completely inaccessible without support. It is thought that 30-40% of people with dyslexia have visual stress too.
If your child or student doesn’t have an issue with visual stress, if they are dyslexic, then they will have a number of challenges on how they interact with language.
In a simplistic way, even if you can read the text, what your brain does to process that information is affected by dyslexia. It may be difficult to copy information, understand information, recall information and all the while as your student copes with this they will be putting so much more effort into studying than someone who is not dyslexic. They will be expending more energy on academic tasks than those without dyslexia.
For me personally, if I have to do any research reading text books, despite not suffering from visual stress, I know that within seconds I will be yawning with tears running down my face from that yawning. I remember when I first studied for my degree, I had to read countless text books and just knowing that the information I was reading was hardly going into my head. I had to try and read as much as possible with the hope that this information was ‘sticking’ in some way. This made studying boring, I simply didn’t get the meaning of things at first and as a result I was exhausted. So it is not surprising then that I started to procrastinate, disrupt the process, go off and eat or drink something just to cope with that boredom that came from not getting the meaning of the text that I was reading.
As parents and teachers we need to see beyond behaviour and put ourselves into the shoes of the student that is studying with dyslexia and empower that student to be the best that they can be.
Check out the following tips that will certainly make a difference…
Setting The Scene.
What do you need to help you be at your best whilst working on your essay?
Take the stress away.
OK, this may not be easy. I know that on my course next year I need to write a 7000 word essay.
Just thinking about this makes me start to feel anxious. For me, it is that anxiety that is my barrier to writing good quality lengthy essays. If I am anxious then I struggle to get my ideas out of my head. I am not short of ideas, but I am when I am stressed, it is like a giant mental cork has been stuffed into gap in my brain where all those great ideas come out!!
If our kids / students are stressing about getting judged for poor grammar and spelling or about feeling exhausted, working too slowly etc, then they will be stifling their creativity and for many that are dyslexic, creativity is often a strength. So we need to find novel ways to help them enjoy getting the ideas out and then if they get excited about that process, then this will help motivate them during the writing stage.
I love mind maps that help me to get ideas out of my head. I find that in using a mind map it is more enjoyable to explore ideas. One way of doing this is to use large pieces of paper or more helpfully I use ‘Magic Whiteboard‘ sheets on my wall at home. This helps my mind mapping to be larger, more visual and it’s just fun using pens and writing on the wall. The movement seems to loosen me up and that makes it a fun and less stressful.
I recorded the following video just to show you what I mean…
| Mindview by Matchware |
| Kidspiration |
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Final Comments
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