Challenging dyslexia
Citation:
Barden, O, Challenging dyslexia, In Bamber, P.M. & Moore, J.C. (Eds.) Teacher Education in Challenging Times., Abingdon, Oxon, Routledge., 2016, 155 - 165Download Item:
Abstract:
Dyslexia remains a troublesome concept. Despite reportedly affecting around one
person in ten, and therefore just about every classroom, it continues to elude
satisfactory definition. Neuroscientists, theorists and other researchers working
in the dominant psychomedical paradigm continue to search for, and disagree
vehemently over, neuroanatomical causes of dyslexia. So there is no consensus
within this research community on what dyslexia is, nor how it comes about. And
dyslexia advocates are among the first to acknowledge that ‘dyslexics’ are a diverse
population and that every dyslexic person’s experience of dyslexia is unique. Yet
anyone who publicly doubts the usefulness or validity of the dyslexia concept – the
idea of dyslexia as a ‘thing’ that can be found in some people’s brains if only we
look hard enough – is on treacherous ground. Consider, for example, the case of
Julian Elliott. Elliott is both a professor of education at the University of Durham
and a qualified educational psychologist. Educational psychologists are trained to
assess for and diagnose dyslexia, and so we would perhaps be wise to listen carefully
when one of their number expresses doubt over this process. But when Professor
Elliott raised his head above the parapet in 2005 by appearing in the Channel 4
Dispatches documentary ‘The Dyslexia Myth’, publishing an article in the Times
Educational Supplement (Elliott, 2005) and later another in the Journal of
Philosophy of Education, in which he criticised the theoretical basis, empirical
validity and educational justification for the dyslexia concept (Elliott and Gibbs,
2008), he was met with scepticism from the mainstream broadsheet press,
opposition from high-profile academics and outright hostility from representatives
of dyslexia charities.
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/bardeno
Author: Barden, Owen
Other Titles:
Teacher Education in Challenging Times.Publisher:
Routledge.Type of material:
Book ChapterCollections
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Full text availableSubject (TCD):
Inclusive Society , Disability Inclusion , LiteracyMetadata
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