Monday 30 January 2017

The girl who forgot how to read.


The Girl who Forgot how to Read.

Recently I was chatting with a lovely young adult, who as well as having a severe form of dyspraxia/DCD (Developmental Coordination Disorder) also has severe dyscalculia.

Dyscalculia = is a difficulty in the learning or comprehension of arithmetic, such as difficulty understanding and manipulating  numbers, and learning mathematics.


People usually think of challenges with maths in terms of learning in the classroom; however, if an individual has dyscalculia the ramifications of this extend across many other areas which are significant for daily living. These include money and budgeting, time keeping and organisation, understanding weight and measurement. This can have a profound influence on job opportunity and retention.

The chat with this delightful individual exposed the fact that she experiences a sense of profound panic when it comes to dealing with money because numbers have no meaning for her.
She has recently moved out of home into a wonderful supported environment where the staff are trying to help her towards greater independence and a degree of independent financial decision making. Dyscalculia is one difficulty amongst a complex profile of specific learning difficulties, which as a bundle makes daily living very challenging indeed for this person.

It had been agreed that to make things as easy as possible whilst she gets used to all the change she is encountering that staff would work out with her what monies she would need to see her through the week, to pay for various activities and refreshments. To ease things further she agreed to her monies being given to her each day so she had only to consider one day at a time.

However it came to the  attention of her key worker that she was secreting money away to collect it up so that she always had a bundle of money on her person 'just incase'.
Further conversation exposed the fact that when she bought her lunch,  the numbers on the menu were meaningless. She was unable to calculate if £4.95 was less than the £8 she had to spend, she felt a sense of terrible panic. She was terrified that she would not be able to pay for what she had ordered. She thought that she would look utterly stupid and people would not understand that she was unable to interpret numerical information.

So what has this got to do with forgetting how to read?

I was reminded of a story of a child who went overseas on holiday with her family. When she arrived at her destination she exclaimed 'Mummy I have forgotten how to read!!!'. What she didn't know was that all the signage etc was in fact in another language and she simply couldn't read it because she didn't understand that language.




I figure that this is how it must be for the young woman and her money issues, like landing in a foreign country every time she looks at a menu, or a price tag.  

It seems to me that this must be very anxiety provoking, and this young person's need to have a wad of money about her was a way of always knowing that she could pay for whatever she had ordered. However, it also left her vulnerable  as she carried around a significant (and often unknown amount) of cash, 'just in case'.

These invisible issues are the kind of experiences people around us are living with all the time. Whether they have acquired a diagnosis is immaterial, the difficulties still exist.

Definitions and research into dyscalculia are in their infancy, but the prevalence of the condition suggests that it affects between 3-6% of the UK population. That is 1 in every 20 children. One in every classroom. significant number of people.

In many people it co exists alongside other conditions as it did with the young woman whose experience I am describing. She is dealing with this anxiety alongside the anxiety that her experiences with dyspraxia also creates.

As a society we are very poor at recognising and understanding invisible difficulties, and yet they render very able, creative, tenacious people at a huge disadvantage in our classrooms and workplaces. It begs the question of how many people who are very capable in many ways do not get the success they deserve, or meet their own potential. We are very good at catching people being bad, and often focus on their weaknesses, rather than their strengths.

If you see someone who seems to be struggling, ask if you can assist them. It just takes a little thought and kindness to get someone else out of a difficult spot.



Ref
C. Lewis, G. J. Hitch, and P. Walker, "The prevalence of specific arithmetic difficulties and specific reading difficulties in 9- to 10-year old boys and girls," Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, vol. 35, pp. 283-292, 1994.





Sunday 29 January 2017

Dyspraxia/DCD It ain't rocket science.

Dyspraxia/DCD.....It ain't rocket science.


Having lived in a house governed by the different needs of those with dyspraxia/DCD for the past 30 years it seems to me that a lot of words, research and work goes into trying to unpick the differences displayed by this exceptional group of people.
Yet to me as someone who lives with and loves three different people with different degrees of the condition it seems that really all is needed is some desire to understand, and empathy.

Empathy = The ability to understand and share the feelings of another.

Dyspraxia, also known as developmental coordination disorder (DCD), is a common, lifelong disorder affecting fine and/or gross motor coordination in children and adults.

Motor co ordination = is the combination of body movements created with the kinematic (such as spatial direction) and kinetic (force) parameters that result in intended actions.

So the condition is all about movement and when we consider that term we think of the very obvious large movements we make that can be easily seen and monitored.
Movement  though is a very complex and necessary activity. Nash- Wortham describes it as

‘…a fundamental activity of life. It is perceived in liveliness of thinking, in fluctuations of feeling and human interaction and most obviously in the physical body.’
(Take Time, 1979, p.3)

So movement is not just about taking physical steps, moving our arms and legs, it is about breathing, speaking, doing, being. We are movement, and when something happens which affects movement it affects our very being, and sets us apart from others. That can be seen obviously in the case of a devastating accident resulting in paralysis, or conditions such as Parkinson’s Disease, or Cerebral Palsy but it is also evident in a more subtle form in a condition such as dyspraxia/DCD…..it is about doing and being.
As Biggs says

It is the fight to produce readable handwriting and a good essay at the same time. It is the frustration that you feel when you’re trying to cross the road, but don’t dare to move because you can’t judge the speed of oncoming traffic. It is the chaos that whirls through your head when someone asks you to plan ahead. It colours every area of living.
(Biggs, V. 2005, p.16)

So dyspraxia may affect an individual's physical movement (the poorly co-ordinated, accident prone person with handwriting difficulties), his speech and language (difficulties in articulation, processing, volume control, listening and understanding), his thoughts (difficulty in planning, sequencing, and organising), his perception (the sense he makes of the world) and his vision (visual related learning difficulties).

When we begin to understand this, and explore it we learn that our bodies are extremely finely tuned organisms, each minutiae of which is dependent on the effortless fluidity of all other processes. When we are even a little ‘out of step’ it can have devastating consequences because all those details simply do not react as a fluid whole in a wonderful display of efficiency. We seem awkward, a little behind what has been said, a little confused by the mass of instruction and expectation in the very social world in which we live. We don’t keep pace, the world is less stable, and our reactions and responses are not ‘usual’.

Add to this the fact that many people with dyspraxia/DCD live with other coexisting conditions (such as dyslexia or ADHD) and it becomes so very evident that the world is harder to interpret and therefore anxiety provoking.

If people took the time to empathise, to consider life as lived by those with dyspraxia/DCD the world would be a kinder place all round.
To me it isn’t rocket science. It is about embracing the fact that people with dyspraxia/DCD (and other invisible disabilities) are in fact exceptional. They function day in and day out swimming against the tide of expectations.
As a result, they think more creatively, approach things with more tenacity, look at others with more forgiveness, and laugh at the very things that would make many of us cry.

Cut them some slack.
Dyspraxia/DCD is here to stay, embrace it, celebrate it, accept it and support those with it.



Ref
Biggs, V (2005) Caged in Chaos. A Dyspraxic Guide to Breaking Free. London: Jessica Kingsley Publishers
Nash- Wortham, M (1979) Take Time The Robinson Press: England.