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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
An 8 page paper which provides an overview of the condition of dyslexia. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAdyslxa.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
very difficult to diagnose and treat in the past, which further emphasizes the low level of self esteem these people have had. In recent decades, however, more and more attention
has been paid to this condition, which has enabled people to realize that individuals suffering from dyslexia are not less than intelligent and also allowed for the implementation of ways
to teach around the condition. The following paper examines what dyslexia is, what causes it, what they symptoms or diagnosis involves, and the treatment or approaches to the condition.
What is Dyslexia? "Dyslexia is a learning disability that makes reading difficult for children and adults who otherwise have the intelligence and motivation necessary to learn to read" (Aetna,
2004). A person with dyslexia has trouble recognizing words although they can generally see the words once someone else is reading the text aloud (Aetna, 2004). Another author notes that,
"Dyslexic children often have trouble recognizing certain basic sounds--phonemes--that form words and are the building blocks of alphabetic language" (Sawicki, 1997; 149). Normal readers can sound words out, dyslexic individuals
cannot. It is not a disease but is rather a condition that is defined by a different sort of brain that learns in a different manner than most people.
"Many people with the condition are gifted and very productive; dyslexia is not at all linked to low intelligence. In fact, intelligence has nothing to do with dyslexia" (Dr. Joseph
F. Smith: Medical Library, 2004). In the past, however, it was believed that if a person had dyslexia, a condition they did not even knew existed and thus did not
have a name, they were not intelligent. It was merely assumed that a child could not learn to read and was lacking intelligence, not that it was an actual condition
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