| Dyslexia Information
"Dyslexia is not a disease to have and to be cured of, but a way of thinking and learning. Often it's a gifted mind waiting to be found and taught."
- Girard Sagmiller, "Dyslexia My Life"
What is Dyslexia?
Dyslexia is an unexpected difficulty learning to read despite intelligence, motivation, and education. Dyslexia is the most-common learning disability, affecting nearly ten percent of the population. Children don't outgrow dyslexia, and adults with dyslexia suffer emotionally and financially because of it. However, research has proven that explicit, systematic phonics can actually help 'rewire' the brain and help dyslexic students learn to read.

How to Identify Dyslexia?
Read these common signs of Dyslexia
Research
Studies have shown that the Dyslexic brain can be "rewired" through a study of systematic phonics. Click on the links below to learn more about Dyslexia and how the Discover Intensive Phonics method can change the lives of Dyslexic students.
Solution
According to Dr. Sally Shaywitz author of Overcoming Dyslexia, programs that teach phonics systematically and explicitly are the most effective. Reading Horizons teaches how to break the reading code in a sequential, systematic and cumulative format that helps all readers understand, retain and apply this code. Reading Horizons provides the foundation concepts that govern the language.

Reading Horizons will empower your students with decoding strategies that will help them confidently read unfamiliar text. Most students are able to read high school level words upon completion of the program. This does not mean that they are reading at a high school level, which includes vocabulary, fluency, and comprehension; however, those areas will continue to improve as they are exposed to additional text.
Reading Horizons can be taught using direct instruction, computer software, or a combination of the two. Best results are achieved when students are allowed to work autonomously at the computer and then receive reinforcement through teacher-lead direct instruction.
Reading Horizons gives teachers the tools to help all their students, whether automatic or struggling readers, become effective readers who are able to decode any word they encounter and increase their fluency and comprehension.
Speak to Shantell, a dyslexia/reading specialist!
What are Orton-Gillingham Principles?
In the 1930s, physician researchers Dr. Samuel T. Orton and Anna Gillingham concluded that struggling readers flourished when exposed to the structured patterns of explicit, systematic phonics instruction. The Discover Intensive Phonics for Yourself method is sequentially infused with the Orton-Gillingham methods, including:
- Multi-sensory applications that engage kinesthetic, auditory, and visual cues.
- Teaches alphabet and phonics principles sequentially.
- Practical, language-based applications.
- Logical repetition using familiar styles of learning that allows learners to make language predictions about new language patterns.
Ortong-Gillingham Correlation
"Systematic phonics instruction has been used widely over a long period of time with positive results, and a variety of systematic phonics programs have proven effective with children of different ages, abilities, and socio-economic backgrounds. These facts and finding provide converging evidence that explicit, systemic phonics instruction is a valuable and essential part of a successful reading program."
- National Reading Panel Report
More Information on Dyslexia
Helpful Books on Dyslexia
- Overcoming Dyslexia by Sally Shaywitz
- Right-Brained Children in a Left-Brained Word by Jeffrey Freed, M.A.T., and Laurie Parsons
- Helping Your Dyslexic Child by Eileen M. Cronin, Ph.D.
- You Don't Have To Be Dyslexic by Joan M. Smith
- When the Brain Can't Hear by Teri James Bellis - Medical - Simon & Schuster
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