Thursday, January 10, 2008

Dyslexia - It might be a good thing!

A recent Bollywood movie named Tare Zameen Par (Stars on Earth) is a huge success and is also receiving accolades for a quality movie.I agree with my friend and I quote him " Taare Zameen Par is an endearing movie about the innocence that forms the core of life"

All of a sudden Dyslexia is being spoken about and Im sure we might also see some initiative spur up trying to help this condition in individuals.Here is some information I gathered on Dyslexia.
  • Dyslexia is caused by a neurological dysfunction, which affects the links between the left and the right hand sides of the brain. Recent research indicates that it is hereditary and that it does not affect intelligence or ability
Some typical effects of dyslexia
  • Limited and unreliable short term memory
  • Persistent difficulty in expressing fully and accurately in writing what has been learned and understood
  • Higher marks gained for coursework than for exams
  • Lack of confidence
  • Low self esteem
  • Aggressive or uncooperative behaviour
  • Summary of common problems
  • Poor Concentration
  • Inaccurate spelling
  • Limited written vocabulary
  • Slow reading
  • Unreliable memory
  • Possible misunderstanding of instructions, essay titles, exam questions
  • Difficulty in planning and writing reports, essays, portfolios, dissertations and presentations
  • Difficulty in meeting deadlines
Underdeveloped Skills:
  • Handwriting
  • Spelling
  • Punctuation
  • Grammar
  • Reading techniques
  • Taking notes
  • Remembering ideas, information, names, dates
  • Planning and organisational skills
Having said that I did a bit of reading after I read some where that Sir Richard Branson is a Dyslexic.Well a little more reading showed that there are more famous personalities who are Dyslexic and now I'm wondering if it has its own advantages of being Dyslexic.Check out the list below,

Bob Hoskins: actor
The teachers thought I was stupid because I read so slowly. They used to tie one of my hands behind my back because I drew pictures with both hands. My brain works both ways, but they didn't notice that. I didn't go home in tears: I just thought I was stupid.
Now, although I still read very slowly, I take in every word and that's fantastic for learning my lines.

Linda La Plante: creator of Prime Suspect, screenwriter and novelist
I wasn't diagnosed until I was twelve. They used think I was backward. I didn't feel at home with the written word until someone gave me a typewriter. Even today, I never send anything out unless it's been checked by my assistant.

Sir Richard Branson; entrepreneur
At the age of eight I still couldn't read. I was soon being beaten once or twice a week for doing poor class work or confusing the date of the Battle of Hastings.

Brian Conley: comedian and actor
As I couldn't keep up with the others in my class, I was simply written off as being thick. A teacher once said to me 'Brian, you'll never get on because you don't concentrate. All you want to do is play the clown'. Now I can read, but my spelling is terrible and I spell phonetically.

A.A. Gill: journalist
My work at school was atrocious. I still remember some of the unkind comments, such as 'There's no point in you studying history, you can't even write'. I still go to extraordinary lengths to compensate for my dyslexia, though I have to dictate my articles because my writing is illegible

Hamish Grant: Chief Executive of Axeon Technology Group
He had nightmares about schoolwork. 'I forced myself to be good at sport and I think this helped me not to be so nervous of failing and to see that every obstacle can be seen as a challenge'.
'I had to learn to live with my dyslexia. But I still remember my B.Sc. finals in chemical engineering, when I missed a huge chunk of a question. Then it reappeared on the paper, just as time was up'.

Tom Cruise: actor
My childhood was extremely lonely. I didn't have many friends and a lot of the kids made fun of me because they thought I was stupid cos I was so very slow with reading.

David Bailey: photographer
At the age of 59, I have yet to write a letter and still write figures the wrong way round. At school, I was singled out in the class for the stupid!
The British denigrate the visual as something to do at the weekend, not realising that visual people are luckier than verbal people: they are not limited by their vocabulary. And who's to say what's normal anyway? Maybe dyslexics are the clever ones. Who wants to be an academic? Most of them are visually illiterate - and art isn't one of those things you can teach. It's natural and, if you're not careful, you can beat it out of someone.

Anthony Hopkins: actor
His childhood was 'awful', just because he was so hopeless at school. 'I couldn't read properly and my writing was a joke. Numbers meant nothing to me at all'. His parents were worried because he had no friends and was moody and difficult. All he liked to do was to play the piano 'very loudly, but not very well'.
He started to act as a way of expressing himself through the words of other people.

Nicholas Negroponte: founder of the Media Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
His Lab tests new technologies for companies such as Microsoft, Nike and the US Federal Bank. He is profoundly dyslexic, but says 'This is a huge advantage because I am so at home in the digital world of communication rather than in the atomic world of paper and print. Being dyslexic has also made me learn how to address audiences without notes or any other prompts'

Steve Redgrave: oarsman and winner of 5 Olympic Gold Medals (2001)
He felt he was always seen as either lazy or stupid at school or both, because he couldn't 'get things right quickly enough'. Even now, he dislikes autograph sessions, because his signature is only a scrawl and 'I never write best wishes or anything else!'
He can still feel inadequate and avoids confronting his problems as much as possible. 'I feel at my best in a boat where I am in absolute control and winning'

Robbie Williams: singer, songwriter
He was always in trouble at school for not doing his work and for being disruptive in class. However, he never minded being the centre of attention and this helped him when he started to perform.
Now he is a multi-millionaire, but has said that he can still feel that there are important things that he will never be able to achieve because of his dyslexia.

Jamie Oliver: TV chef, restaurateur
He has talked openly of his dyslexia and the problems it can still cause him Jamie always coped best with practical subjects at school and hated reading and writing. His father encouraged him to help in the family pub and he began to see this as a possible career because ‘you didn’t have to do so much with a pen in your hand’. He completed a college catering course with some difficulty and later made his name as a TV chef. He has written several best selling cookery books and owns a fashionable London restaurant and has been influential in changing school dinners.

Also....
Walt Disney, Thomas Edison, General George Patton, Pablo Picasso, Hans Chrisitan Anderson, Leonardo da Vinci, Sir Winston Churchill, Gustave Flaubert, Alexander Graham Bell, Michael Faraday, Henry Ford, Eddie Izzard, Thomas Jefferson, John F Kennedy, Jackie Stewart, George Washington, Benjamin Zephania.

Also....... Me. I do feel that even Im Dyslexic. Is there any online test or self evaluation tool to find out if one is Dyslexic? Please do revert and share if any one has any information on this.