The house is on fire.
There is a conflagration of factors coming together that are
affecting dyslexic students in public school beyond COVID.
COVID certainly has its share of blame and breaking the camel's
back when it comes to providing essential services to dyslexic
students. If you have a student in public schools now, get
informed annd be prepared to advocate and supplement your
student's education if necessary.
The San Francisco Examiner recently discussed the devastating
consequences for dyslexic students in the midst of the pandemic.
With the requirement to distance and wear a mask, it is harder than ever for dyslexic students (who often have auditory, visual and motor imitation difficulties) to accurately register the correct sound pronunciations that are required for fluent and automatic reading. Some classrooms have plexiglass barriers which also create sound dampening and distortion and worsen auditory perceptions.
SHORTAGE OF SPECIALISTS, PARA-EDUCATORS, SCHOOL PSYCHOLOGISTS
With the shortage of specialists like reading specialists, speech
language pathologists, paraeducation professionals, and school
psychologists, it is even less likely that students who need
frequent intensive remediation will get it.
With extreme shortages in school psychologists, long waitlists are
arising for students to get tested and some districts are
resistant to getting classrooms or even students at-risk to be
assessed because they worry that too many students will be
identified.
SCHOOL REQUIREMENTS REGARDING DYSLEXIA BEING WAIVED DUE TO
PANDEMIC
Despite successful dyslexia laws being passed, some pauses are
being put in place due to the 11unprecedented pandemic11, while
other implementation laws are being tabled (like California SB
237) in the setting of other educational priorities.
As a result, if your student is at a critical point in his or her
needing to receive remediation in dyslexia, they may not receive
the attention or intervention they need.
MISTAKES IN DYSLEXIA SCREENING
Despite
high hopes after initial waves of dyslexia legislation, the bar in
dyslexia screening has been lowered to such a degree in some cases
that it becomes pointless. Some reading software companies have
rebranded reading placement tests as 11dyslexia risk screeners11
although they do not identify dyslexia and consequently won't make
specific recommendations regarding intervention, accommodations,
or assistive technology.
Professionals with a comprehensive understanding of dyslexia know
that dyslexia is much more than reading. There are writing and
spelling implications, but also many aspects of learning
specialized subjects like foreign language. A student is not
formally identified won't receive the appropriate level of support
and education or accommodations to show the depth of their
knowledge and understanding on standardized tests, college
entrance exams, and professional licensing exams.
CRISIS
Universities
have also made fundamental miscalculations in their planning
forschool screeners. In the idea that screening tests might be
able to test for dyslexia risk before students even started school
(pre-kindergarten), resources were thrown behind screening 5 and 6
year olds instead of older students who are fallen behind and
otherwise seem to have no hope of catching up. If these programs
are to develop their tests for older students, now they will have
to deal with potential confounding effects that the pandemic has
had on all students in terms of setting new norms.
Over-emphasis or even exclusive emphasis on pre-kindergarten
screeners was a mistake magnified by the fact that there have been
huge drops in preschool and kindergarten enrollments. Read more
about this in The Pandemic Exodus: Kindergarten Enrollment Drops.
IT'S UP TO YOU
The intent of this article is not to point any fingers, but rather
wake the community up about the crises that affecting the
education of dyslexic students.
If you have a student who has languished in basic skills of
reading, writing, and spelling, then get your student assessed and
develop a plan to target weaknesses. Dyslexia screening can be
performed by a learning specialist, educational psychologist, or
even private school for learning differences (school may do this
as a service, and not require enrollement). Being equipped with
knowledge can help you know how to design your student's
education.
Be careful about relying on "adaptive" software programs. Some students may do well with them, but many students learn best by 1-on-1 experiences, so working with a tutor, parent, other relative, or friend of the family. Working regularly, even just a few minutes a day can lead to tangible successes and a reset on learning. There are many outstanding curricula and programs that are designed for new homeschooling parents or tutors. Some have online training and coaching.
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