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Every parent dealing with dyslexic kids should understand the misconceptions around this condition. Photo: Getty Images

Multiple award-winning children's author and dyslexia advocate, Don M. Winn, is a dyslexic writer who well knows the challenge of learning to love to read. Winn's goal is not only to write books that are engaging, he's also educating and helping those with dyslexia that have not felt heard or understood until very recently, with the influx of new data about the condition.

"One of my personal goals is to promote dyslexia awareness because despite new research about the condition, many misconceptions and inaccurate beliefs are still rampant," says Winn. The author assures is it important to set the record straight because dyslexia is not something that can be "cured" or reversed by any means: diet, exercises, medication, herbs, or talk therapy.

"It’s very important to make sure that parents whose kids have dyslexia have realistic expectations for their loved ones and the resources to understand the full scope of their children’s needs," he says. "How disheartening it would be for a dyslexic child who had faithfully followed some form of 'treatment' if a parent or teacher showed disappointment or frustration because the child’s dyslexia did not 'resolve.' The last thing dyslexic kids need is more shame," he added.

dyslexia
Combat the stigma around the learning difficulty! Photo: Mayo Clinic

Mr. Winn says not all parents of struggling readers/writers can expect similar outcomes, for that reason he enlist five misconceptions about dyslexia:

  • Misperception #1: “All kids who reverse their b’s and d’s have dyslexia.”

Actually that is not the case; science has proven otherwise. "Personally, I have trained myself to overcome letter reversal in my printing (I can’t write cursive), but I am still quite dyslexic, and have all its other complications, I assure you! In addition, not all dyslexics reverse similarly-shaped letters," says Mr. Winn.

Therefore, kinesthetic exercises or other techniques which can potentially help some struggling students to strengthen left/right brain activity will not remedy dyslexia.

It is also not a dietary problem. No amount of bone broth, medicinal herbs, green juices, or other wholesome foods will reverse dyslexia. "While I eat an unprocessed diet with plenty of plant foods, and encourage others to do the same, it’s not because I believe that food impacts dyslexia," he added.

  • Misperception #2: “Dyslexia can be outgrown.”

Nope. Kids with dyslexia are not developmentally delayed, nor is the problem temporary. Dyslexia is a life-long difference in the way the brain processes information.

  • Misperception #3: “Dyslexia is really about social anxiety or lack of maturity.”

Not a chance. Having a student repeat a grade and teaching him/her the very same way will not improve the student’s skills. Social maturity will not improve the student’s ability to read. "Like many of you, I repeated first grade, which left me even more behind and plagued with lower self-esteem than ever," says the writer.

  • Misperception #4: “People with dyslexia see things backwards, therefore dyslexia is a vision problem.”

No, people with dyslexia do not “see” things backwards; their brains process language information differently. Vision therapy does not improve dyslexia.

  • Misperception #5: “Kids with dyslexia are lazy. They just need to try harder.”

This is one of the most poisonous. To decide that dyslexic kids have character issues, or aren’t motivated enough to do good work is profoundly harmful. Lack of awareness about the disorder among educators and parents has often resulted in kids being branded as “lazy.”

Nothing could be farther from the truth. Instead, the findings of MRI studies provide evidence that people with dyslexia are not poorly taught, lazy, or stupid, but have an inborn brain difference that has nothing to do with intelligence.

If students with dyslexia do not receive the right type of intervention and/or classroom accommodations, they often struggle in school—despite being bright, motivated, and spending hours on homework assignments. In almost all cases, kids with dyslexia are actually working much harder than their peers, and should be acknowledged for doing so.

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