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The Dyslexic Advantage: Unlocking the Hidden…
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The Dyslexic Advantage: Unlocking the Hidden Potential of the Dyslexic Brain (edition 2012)

by Brock L. Eide M.D. M. A. (Author)

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1966137,536 (4.24)2
"An updated edition of Drs. Brock and Fernette Eide's popular dyslexia book with a wealth of new material and improved dyslexic-friendly font"--
Member:LadySavant
Title:The Dyslexic Advantage: Unlocking the Hidden Potential of the Dyslexic Brain
Authors:Brock L. Eide M.D. M. A. (Author)
Info:Plume (2012), Edition: Reprint, 304 pages
Collections:Your library
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The Dyslexic Advantage: Unlocking the Hidden Potential of the Dyslexic Brain by Brock L. Eide

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I got bogged down in the middle with almost too much brain profiling/types of brains, but the second half had useful information. ( )
  Asauer72 | Jul 3, 2023 |
The second book I've read in my research on dyslexia. I felt it was much more grounded than the first. I think this book is helpful to people with dyslexia and very encouraging. For non-dyslexic people, it's a good book for understanding just how incredible people with dyslexia are. We know we are all different, but often it's an idea we pay lip service to while ignoring it. This book explains how dyslexic people are different and what advantages that provides to them. The book is laid out into several parts, each with a consistent chapter layout, particularly for the MIND parts. It's got great resources in the appendix as well. ( )
  Zcorbain | Jan 14, 2021 |
Long before I cracked open this book, my initial reaction was: "Oh my goodness, a reason I can feel good about myself without a lick of effort! Do I want a shameless ego-booster and and fluff pop-psychology mood enhancer?"

The answer was, of course, "Absolutely! Gimmie, Gimmie!"

For, you see, I have dyslexia. I have also spent most of my life in serious pursuit of overcompensation, too. I couldn't read before age 13 and I spent most of my effort trying to "fake it" just so I could get through school without being ostracized.

It didn't work. I almost quit school feeling like a complete and utter outsider who was pretty much worthless, which was pretty damn awful because I knew I was smart. I just couldn't make sense of all the easy things that everyone else had an easy time with, while all the complicated intuitional systems-theory top-down approach to a theory of mind came utterly easy to me. Complex ideas? No problem. Conclusions based on very little shown work? No problem.

So then I decided to compensate for my disability by tons of Naruto-like effort and after 8 months working on a single book, I finally came to a Theory Of Reading that relied on an idea-based approach that circled streams of words rather than the words, themselves.

Suddenly, I could read! Well, sort of. I could gist the hell out of anything.

More and more effort was required, and practice, practice, practice, mindful and careful attention to all basic practices of reading and writing, until I eventually worked my way out of special-ed and into honors courses and two degrees in college and eventually to an average 600-700 pages (or more) read per day.

And then we arrive to the reading of this book.

Is the M.I.N.D. approach to understanding both the trials and triumphs of dyslexics useful and edifying? Yes. Yes, it is. I recognized all the ways I think, which is quite different than how most people think. Do normal people build models of interconnected ideas in their heads and attach them all to memory episodes and narratives that tell stories, constantly retelling the tale about oneself as they keep changing and growing?

Um... maybe more than I think?

Is it a useful model to consider myself as having too little RAM, so I have to push almost everything into Permanent Storage on the fly with narrative "cheats"? Yes. Does this explain how I still can't hand-write legibly without losing the full train of thought before I even finish a sentence? Yes. Does it explain why I am always so damn SLOW when I start any new task, but then, after a long, long learning curve, I then blast out the door? Yes.

Do most dyslexics have similar stories? True success stories that NEVER begin in school but generally show an outrageous disproportion of hella-successful people in real life?

Probably.

I began reading this book from a snide and self-serving pessimism, thinking it was about time that I got some damn recognition instead of ostracism, but I finished it feeling a a pretty warm glow of understanding and camaraderie with the entire subset of the population of which I belong.

Maybe this book was meant for me, after all. In a real way. Not just the way I began it.

And perhaps this book was really meant for my 13 year old me, even more. Can I forget lifelong depression and self-worth issues? Yes. I can. Might it have been so much more productive if I had a book like this at a much earlier time?

I'd like to think so. And that's why I'd recommend this book for anyone with loved ones who have dyslexia. I'd recommend that you read this book to them, aloud, so that the understanding sinks in for both you and them at the same time. The connection you'll form with them will probably be invaluable, perhaps even life-long.

Dyslexia isn't a disease. Even ADHD, which is often a misdiagnosis of dyslexia, falls under the category of people who simply Think Differently. We have lots of talents, but those talents aren't easily identified when the expectations are for completely different skills. :)

Good book. :)

( )
  bradleyhorner | Jun 1, 2020 |
This book is very informative beyond what I had researched on the internet. It really puts a parent at ease when they learn their child has this. It really shows it as a gift and not so much as the burden you feel like it is. It was written to be supportive. I don't know how I would use this in the classroom other than recommend it to a parent of a child in my class. ( )
  AmandaMcClure | Apr 19, 2017 |
This book is packed with insights, the main one being that dyslexia is a different way of processing rather than an inferior one. People wired with longer, more loosely packed brain connections connect disparate points and observations. While they don’t process details as well as others, they gain advantages in seeing patterns and making creative connections. Absent the criteria for a standardized level of rote, detailed processing, dyslexia becomes a different processing style rather than a disability. This different processing style can be leveraged to great advantage, as exemplified in such successful people as John Lennon, Charles Schwab, and Richard Branson. ( )
  jpsnow | Jul 25, 2016 |
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"An updated edition of Drs. Brock and Fernette Eide's popular dyslexia book with a wealth of new material and improved dyslexic-friendly font"--

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