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Monday, 8 November 2010

Info Post
Do you ever take being able to read for granted? What's amazing is how complex a task reading can be. I received a book in the mail from Penguin Books entitled Reading in the Brain: The New Science of How We Read that explains how we learn to read. The book discusses the psychology and neuroscience behind reading and asks a fascinating question, "How, then, did our primate brain learn to read?"

The book provides some good hypotheses for how we learned to read. I was most interesting in a chapter called "The Dyslexic Brain" that summarized thirty years of research on dyslexia. A definition of dyslexia is given:
a disproportionate difficulty in learning to read that cannot be attributed to mental retardation, sensory deficit, or an underprivileged background....Current estimates indicate that from 5 to 17 percent of children in the United States suffer from dyslexia.


The section on "Overcoming Dyslexia" reminds parents that genetics is not a life sentence. "The brain is a 'plastic organ' which constantly changes and rebuilds itself...."

Overall, the book looks like a worthwhile read if you are in the special ed field, a learning disabilities specialist, teacher, or have a child with a reading disability. If you can wade through the biological explanations, you will definitely learn much about the evolving science of reading and how to improve the ability to read.

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