Dyslexics
who grew up in the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s had almost no help. Little
was known about dyslexia.
At age forty-seven, Sandi Dillon decided to join a dyslexia study.
She, along with other adult dyslexics, was a subject in a study
on reading. Sandi underwent an eight week reading intervention.
Scientists
at Georgetown University then studied the effects of the reading
intervention by doing brain scans of the subjects.
Sandi said this of her intense lessons, “It was a lot of drilling
and a lot of studying that first eight weeks and I guess training
another part of my brain…to make it all fit.”
“If you take an adult who’s had a lifelong
reading problem, like Sandi, the ways that the brain may change
as a result of an intensive intervention may be somewhat different
than a younger child where the brain may be somewhat more malleable.”
Dr. Guinevere Eden, Associate Professor
of Pediatrics, Director of Georgetown University’s Center for the
Study of Learning
The
study showed, through brain scans, that the adult dyslexic’s mind
can be trained or re-wired. Hard work can bring about change.
Adults
like Sandi Dillon are proof that a reading intervention can alter
one’s life.
|