Writing in the Plano (TX, US) Courier, Jim Kilpatrick has a back-to-school feature about kids with dyslexia. He contrast the need for parent-teacher meetings and other activities needed to ensure a good start for students with the more usual purchasing of materials and clothing that virtually everyone experiences. These issues are especially important, according to Mr. Kirkpatrick, for adolescents. He focuses on the experiences of two families.
“It’s very hard at 15 to be different, to be singled out and to be identified as anything other than like everybody else,” Shannon Knox, co-creator of Impacting Dyslexic Education Awareness and Support, said. “That is the key to life when you are a teenager.”
It is the mothers and fathers at this point who help their child get off on the right foot that first day at school, said Marci Soulakis-Orr, the other half to the Plano based support group for families of dyslexic students.
Link to Mr. Kirkpatrick’s story (link is good for 14 days, I think).
Sphere: Related Content
Political office candidacies
Today’s the day when we learn whether Dannel Malloy, mayor of Stamford (CT, US) who also happens to have overcome Learning Disabilities, will win a primary election in Connecticut and become the demoncratic party candidate for govenor. We covered Mr. Malloy’s candidacy in May of this year here.
I don’t think I would vote for or against a candidate simply because he or she had Learning Disabilities. The decision should be predicated on my opinions about the opposing candidates’ positions on issues. In the abstract, though, if all other things were equal, I suppose I’d probably vote for someone with Learning Disabilities. What do you think?
Look for coverage of the election in these sources:
- Hartford Courant;
- Manchester Journal Inquirer;
- New Haven Advocate;
- New Haven Register;
- Stamford Advocate.
Sphere: Related Content